A Word to the Resourceful

12 Post author: Vaniver 20 January 2012 02:49PM

Paul Graham has a new article out. Everything he's written is worth reading if you're at all interested in startups, but this article seemed explicitly connected to rationality, by identifying an area where people who are more likely to update / less likely to rationalize will do better than others.

The obvious questions: can this be tested? Noticed early on, rather than in hindsight? Changed by rationality training?

Comments (5)

Comment author: shminux 20 January 2012 05:10:28PM 4 points [-]

Not sure if it can be tested, but I have noticed a pattern where the people that I find (subjectively) less likely to update tend to speak in absolutes, rather than qualifiers. For example, "Linux is so much better than Windows in every way" vs. "I like the flexibility Linux gives me, and I saved a few bucks, too."

Comment author: Solvent 21 January 2012 02:15:47AM 0 points [-]

Perhaps that pattern is measuring how well people reject the affect heuristic?

Comment author: jmmcd 20 January 2012 04:52:49PM 4 points [-]

It seemed odd that the outliers at the two ends of the spectrum could be detected by what appeared to be unrelated tests. You'd expect that if the founders at one end were distinguished by the presence of quality x, at the other end they'd be distinguished by lack of x.

In general I think it's quite common to need different tests or heuristics for the two ends of a scale. Do you use the same heuristic to detect, among people, the smartest of the smart and the stupidest of the stupid? Or in works of art, or say pop songs -- the bad ones are not "the opposite" of the good ones.

Comment author: John_Maxwell_IV 23 January 2012 01:59:58AM *  1 point [-]

Assuming your expected success as a startup founder can be modeled as a linear combination of various characteristics you have, there is probably going to be a single characteristic with the largest coefficient.

Regarding the smart people example, it might be that a single heuristic that looks for the presence or absence of a specific gene really does do the best job classifying people. Regarding the pop song example, there might be some measure of an artist's musical ability that does the best job. We are looking for the factors that are causative.

Comment author: sixes_and_sevens 21 January 2012 12:23:36AM 0 points [-]

In a general population, yes, but for a relatively small sub-population selected for a specific purpose, his assertion seems to hold water.