History proves otherwise: even people ten times smarter than people like me produce no more extensive or revolutionary technological or scientific output,
I will go out on a limb and assert that this man has a higher-than-average IQ. However, for his statement to be true he would have to be what some call "profoundly mentally retarded". That is, someone with an IQ below 25. To my knowledge, there have been an exceedingly small number of individuals in the range of 10x that IQ score -- amongst them the highest IQ yet recorded. So there are real problems of scale in his underlying assumptions.
Only if you take 'ten times smarter' to mean multiplying IQ score by ten. But since the mapping of the bell curve to numbers is arbitrary in the first place, that's not a meaningful operation; it's essentially a type error. The obvious interpretation of 'ten times smarter' within the domain of humans is by percentile, e.g. if the author is at the 99% mark, then it would refer to the 99.9% mark.
And given that, his statement is true; it is a curious fact that IQ has diminishing returns, that is, being somewhat above average confers significant advantage in m...
Recently I stumbled upon Richard Carrier's essay "Are We Doomed" (June 5, 2009), when asked to comment about the Singularity, said the following:
What do you think?