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sdf2erf | 19 days ago
Its the same reason why a pure technologist can fail spectacularly at developing products that deliver experiences that people want.
sdf2erf | 19 days ago
Its the same reason why a pure technologist can fail spectacularly at developing products that deliver experiences that people want.
newyankee|19 days ago
CamperBob2|19 days ago
I don't have time to dig up the citation that someone pointed me towards, but it's out there and can be found. Which is a bummer, because I've learned a lot from his videos and writing and have a lot of respect for his work.
sdf2erf|19 days ago
Being picked by Elon perhaps amplified that too.
aleph_minus_one|19 days ago
Intelligence (which psychologists define as the g factor [1]; this concept is very well-researched) does not make you an expert on any given topic. It just, for example, typically enables you to learn new topics faster, and lets you see connections between topics.
If Karpathy did not spend a serious effort of learning to get a good understanding of people, it's likely that he is not an expert on this topic (which I guess basically nobody would expect).
Also, while being a rationalist very likely requires you to be rather intelligent, only a (I guess rather small) fraction of highly intelligent people are rationalists.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G_factor_(psychometrics)
sdf2erf|19 days ago
This does not come from spending effort in learning people - its more innate. You either have it or you dont. E.g. you cant learn to be 'empathetic'.
It always boggles my mind when people dont consider genetic factors.