Well, in a sort of devil's advocacy here...
I am not so sure conspiracy theorists, free-energy mavericks and other "I have overturned all of physics!" types, and the like think of their process as having shortcut the onerous task of actually learning a subject.
My argument comes in two parts; one, that they fail to grasp the effort it takes to even earn a science or engineering degree, much less become an established professional. Nor do they understand the width, depth, or the specificity and applicability of that knowledge. If they think about it at all, they think of it as memorizing a bunch of essentially meaningless gibberish that can be regurgitated on command to win the sheepskin.
In the second part, they think that the work they have done is hard. Because to them, it was. I run into this all the time; they have managed to notice something in a photograph and they think no-one else has mentioned it because they lack the same keen attention to detail. It never crosses their mind that almost everyone who saw that photograph already saw the same thing -- and has already gone through the next necessary mental steps in attempting to understand what it is they saw.
They think they are the one-eyed man in the land of the blind, and they keep crying "Can't you see that glowing basketball-sized object right over our heads!" Instead they are the one-eyed man in the land of those with normal depth perception, who all reply, "What, the Moon? That's far away, not right overhead!"