Found 1 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Competent Elites | Hacker News
Competent Elites | Hacker News
One of the major surprises I received when I moved out of childhood into the real world, was the degree to which the world is stratified by genuine competence.
This was the point at which I realized that my child prodigy license had officially completely expired.
No, even worse than that, much worse than that: these CEOs and CTOs and hedge-fund traders, these folk of the mid-level power elite, seemed happier and more alive.
But entering the real world, I found out that the average mortal really can't be an executive.  Even the average manager can't function without a higher-level manager above them.
But entering the real world, I found out that the average mortal really can't be an executive.  Even the average manager can't function without a higher-level manager above them
Someone who can be an executive at all, even a below-average executive, is a rare find.
I tried—once—going to an interesting-sounding mainstream AI conference that happened to be in my area.  I met ordinary research scholars and looked at their posterboards and read some of their papers.  I watched their presentations and talked to them at lunch.  And they were way below the level of the big names.  I mean, they weren't visibly incompetent, they had their various research interests and I'm sure they were doing passable work on them.  And I gave up and left before the conference was over, because I kept thinking "What am I even doing here?"
There's "smart" and then there's "smart enough for your cognitive mechanisms to reliably decide to sign up for cryonics".
It's a standard idea that people who make it to the elite, tend to stop talking to ordinary mortals, and only hang out with other people at their level of the elite.
·news.ycombinator.com·
Competent Elites | Hacker News