The last one is the only one I understand from your list, but it seems like a rather good concrete example. Making an elaborate plan is a great idea if it’s definitely going to be useful, but otherwise it’s a waste of time—like in HPMOR, when Harry makes a whole scheme of experiments to do that’ll last for many months, but then it turns out his most fundamental premise is totally wrong. The big plan give him a big win when his assumptions are correct, but don’t help him one iota when they’re wrong, and he wastes a lot of time.
Moral: only make large schemes when you have strong evidence that they’ll be very useful, and even then, first carry out any basic preliminary research, to check the assumptions going into the plan.
The last one is the only one I understand from your list, but it seems like a rather good concrete example. Making an elaborate plan is a great idea if it’s definitely going to be useful, but otherwise it’s a waste of time—like in HPMOR, when Harry makes a whole scheme of experiments to do that’ll last for many months, but then it turns out his most fundamental premise is totally wrong. The big plan give him a big win when his assumptions are correct, but don’t help him one iota when they’re wrong, and he wastes a lot of time.
Moral: only make large schemes when you have strong evidence that they’ll be very useful, and even then, first carry out any basic preliminary research, to check the assumptions going into the plan.