The Dragon in the Garage and the Age of Infinite Certainty
Copyright: Sanjay Basu Carl Sagan gave us one of the cleanest mental tools ever built. It looks simple. Almost childish. A person says there is a dragon in the garage. You go to see it. You find nothing. Then the claims begin to shift. The dragon is invisible. It floats. It breathes heatless fire. It leaves no tracks. It cannot be detected by any instrument. Every test fails. Every test is answered with a patch. At first it sounds like a joke. It is not a joke. It is a diagnosis. Sagan was not merely making fun of superstition. He was doing something harder. He was showing how bad thinking survives. He was showing how belief protects itself when reality refuses to cooperate. That little dragon has grown up since Sagan wrote about it. It now has Wi Fi, a ring light, and a premium subscription. It lives on social media. It appears in politics. It appears in health claims. It appears in investment scams. It appears in AI hype. It appears in our family WhatsApp groups before breakfas...