I wonder how Eliezer would describe his “moat”, i.e., what cognitive trait or combination of traits does he have, that is rarest or hardest to cultivate in others? (Would also be interested in anyone else’s take on this.)
Yeah, I agree that there’s no one who Pareto dominates Eliezer at his top four most exceptional traits. (Which I guess I’d say are: taking important weird ideas seriously, writing compelling/moving/insightful fiction (for a certain audience), writing compelling/evocative/inspiring stuff about how humans should relate to rationality (for a certain audience), being broadly knowledgeable and having clever insights about many different fields.)
This also sounds sort of like how I’d describe what Scott Alexander is among the Pareto-best in the world at, just that Scott is high-verbal while Eliezer is high-flat (to use the SMPY’s categorisation). But Scott’s style seems more different from Eliezer’s than would be explained by verbal vs flat.
Notably, I think I disagree with Eliezer on what his moat is! I think he thinks that he’s much better at coming to correct conclusions or making substantial intellectual progress than I think he is.
I wonder how Eliezer would describe his “moat”, i.e., what cognitive trait or combination of traits does he have, that is rarest or hardest to cultivate in others? (Would also be interested in anyone else’s take on this.)
Buck’s comment upthread has a guess:
This also sounds sort of like how I’d describe what Scott Alexander is among the Pareto-best in the world at, just that Scott is high-verbal while Eliezer is high-flat (to use the SMPY’s categorisation). But Scott’s style seems more different from Eliezer’s than would be explained by verbal vs flat.
Notably, I think I disagree with Eliezer on what his moat is! I think he thinks that he’s much better at coming to correct conclusions or making substantial intellectual progress than I think he is.