This article provides a comprehensive critical analysis of Benjamin F. Jones's influential work on age and great invention, which documents a significant secular trend toward older ages at which inventors make breakthrough contributions. Drawing on data from Nobel Prize winners and great inventors across the twentieth century, Jones finds that the mean age at great invention increased by approximately six years over this period, attributing this shift to the expanding "burden of knowledge." This article examines Jones's theoretical framework, empirical methodology, and the broader implications of his findings for innovation policy and economic growth. While acknowledging the paper's substantial contributions, this analysis identifies important limitations—including concerns about measurement validity, alternative causal interpretations, and the generalizability of findings—and engages with contradictory evidence that complicates the burden of knowledge narrative. The article situates Jones's work within broader literatures spanning economics, psychology, and the sociology of science, ultimately arguing that while the burden of knowledge hypothesis offers a compelling partial explanation for observed trends, the phenomenon is likely more complex and contingent than the original framework suggests.