We discover something unexpected, and we celebrate twofold, threefold, and morefold, because its nuances and implications can ebb outwards, often lending hope to scientists working in entirely different fields. This is the nature of inductive reasoning, the foundation of the scientific method, and the reason why science–as a human project–is generational. When one thing is found to be plausible, testable, or true, a suite of potential other truths and plausibilities tend to follow suit. Discovery, by nature, has a ripple effect.