Here are some examples of mistakes that intelligent people make
Looks like you mean “here are some examples of mistakes people on LessWrong still make.”
Highly intelligent people such as great artists and writers, successful politicians and lawyers and drug kingpins, often depend on continued popularity, value social signaling extremely highly, know most people aren’t rational, and don’t rigidly follow rules.
However, I think it is interesting to consider whether there are qualities that are associated with intelligence, either biologically or through the way intelligent people are socialized, that are unintelligent in themselves. It seems like this is true with rationality; perhaps something about thinking rationally also causes people to, say, undervalue popularity to an irrational extent. I’m having a harder time thinking of examples that seem as likely with intelligence in general, although that’s made trickier by having a vaguer definition of intelligence than rationality.
It seems like this is true with rationality; perhaps something about thinking rationally also causes people to, say, undervalue popularity to an irrational extent.
Rather than A causing B, I reckon it’s more that A & B have a common cause, C: psychological traits that make someone more interested in thinking rationally tend to make them less interested in popularity.
Looks like you mean “here are some examples of mistakes people on LessWrong still make.”
Highly intelligent people such as great artists and writers, successful politicians and lawyers and drug kingpins, often depend on continued popularity, value social signaling extremely highly, know most people aren’t rational, and don’t rigidly follow rules.
However, I think it is interesting to consider whether there are qualities that are associated with intelligence, either biologically or through the way intelligent people are socialized, that are unintelligent in themselves. It seems like this is true with rationality; perhaps something about thinking rationally also causes people to, say, undervalue popularity to an irrational extent. I’m having a harder time thinking of examples that seem as likely with intelligence in general, although that’s made trickier by having a vaguer definition of intelligence than rationality.
Rather than A causing B, I reckon it’s more that A & B have a common cause, C: psychological traits that make someone more interested in thinking rationally tend to make them less interested in popularity.