Another extreme advantage of the the “Renaissance man” is the ability to clearly *convey* emotion learnings to others (especially those without strong emotional intelligence). Typically, EI is won through interaction and, essentially, reinforcement learning on contact with others—possessing both the technical vocabulary and understanding of human social norms allows you to explain very tricky things nerds have a tough time learning directly to them. This is extremely useful in, e.g workplaces or high stakes environments (a good manager can quickly untangle a mess of arguments), and arguably underappreciated in therapists and similar vocations.
Strongly agreed.
Another extreme advantage of the the “Renaissance man” is the ability to clearly *convey* emotion learnings to others (especially those without strong emotional intelligence). Typically, EI is won through interaction and, essentially, reinforcement learning on contact with others—possessing both the technical vocabulary and understanding of human social norms allows you to explain very tricky things nerds have a tough time learning directly to them. This is extremely useful in, e.g workplaces or high stakes environments (a good manager can quickly untangle a mess of arguments), and arguably underappreciated in therapists and similar vocations.