but basing the "doesn't make sense" on the fact that a number of people I showed this blog post reached the opposite conclusion (namely, David is more impressive than Steve). See the comments on this Facebook post for instance.
It would be interesting to study this in more detail. If you interview college admissions people I think it would be good to ask them with of the two people they would prefer.
But the bulk of innovative activities probably don't produce much value
Most startups fail. That doesn't mean that starting a startup isn't an activity with high social value.
Ancient Greece had their version of the steam engine that was build to impress people. They didn't get economic value out of it, but the desire to build something to impress produced innovative thinking. A lot of innovation comes out of exploring a subject and simply trying to do something impressive.
Seeking to do things that are impressive produces memetic diversity. You want to have a society with people with diverse skill sets.
Having done QS effects the way I think about biological issues. I'm not "better" like your average biology student but there are a lot of average biology students that aren't very distinct in their skill set. The low hanging fruit that you can pick with that particular skill set is picked.
Having an unusual skillset means that there might be things that are low hanging fruit for yourself but not for the average person in a field.
As answer to your recent post about biomedical research, CasioTheSane writes:
I would only recommend getting into the field if you have a strong passion for solving medical problems, and have some clear ideas about how you will attack these problems very differently than others already working on them.
Steve is more likely to tackle problems differently then the people who already work in a field than Dave. To the extend that I want to make strategic choices that encourage innovation, I want more people with the kind of mindset that Steve has.
In the context of people pursuing mainstream academics, they can be somewhat misguided about how well they understood material, but not too much.
That not true. There are studied engineers who sign petitions that there's no way the world trade center collapsed due to planes flying into it because they can't see how the plane flying into the building would make the building collapse. They expect too much that the real world behaves like their textbook problems. The real world is complex and things happen for complicated reasons.
People with strong statistics education often make the mistake of assuming that real life phenomena are normally distributed. I once read that a company engaged in bookmaking bets rather hired physics people than studied statistics folks because the statistics folks too much expect that real world problems are structured like textbook problems.
Instead of teaching to always use functions that are protected against SQL injections like Java's prepared statements one of my tutors in the database lectures told us that sometimes using prepared statements might be more time efficient and sometimes using string concatenations might be more time efficient. He suggest that one is supposed to see which of the two alternatives are more effective for a particular software that you want to write. That's incredibly bad advice from a software engineering standpoint.
If Steve writes applications for internships to a bunch of companies he has feedback in terms of the responses he gets. Most projects have internal feedback. In my own QS involvement there was never really a time of not knowing what to do but there were time where doing something like calling up a place to ask whether they would provide a room for a meetup was very challenging and I therefore procrastinated the task.
Most startups fail. That doesn't mean that starting a startup isn't an activity with high social value.
This depends on the extent to which a startup's success can be predicted in advance. My impression is that startup accelerators and venture capitalists do a reasonable job of predicting the set of startups that are likely to succeed. If a startup is in the threshold where a venture capitalist or accelerator considers them fundable, then yes, I think the activity has high social value in expectation, even if it ends up failing.
...Ancient Greece had their
Cal Newport (personal website, Wikipedia page) is a moderately well-known author of four books as well as a computer science researcher. I have read two of his four books: How To Become a Straight-A Student The Unconventional Strategies Real College Students Use to Score High While Studying Less and How to Be a High School Superstar: A Revolutionary Plan to Get into College by Standing Out (Without Burning Out). I'm particularly interested in his book on becoming a high school superstar. My interest arises as part of trying to figure out how people can better use their extracurricular activities to have more fun, learn more, and create more value for the world. As Jonah recently pointed out, choosing high school extracurricular activities could in principle have huge social value in addition to the private benefits. And as far as I know, Cal Newport is the only person who has given systematic advice on high school extracurriculars to a broad audience. He's been referenced many times on Less Wrong.
In this post, I'll briefly discuss his suggestions in the latter book and some of my broad philosophical disagreements. I'm eager to know about the experiences of people who've tried to implement Newport's advice (particularly that pertaining to extracurriculars, but also any of his other advice). First impressions of people who click through the links and read about Newport right now would also be appreciated. I intend to write on some of these issues in more detail in the coming days, though those later posts of mine will not be focused solely on what Newport has to say.
You might also be interested in the comments on this Facebook post of mine discussing Newport's ideas.
A quick summary of Newport's views
Newport's book advises high school students to pick an extracurricular activity and shine at it to the level that it impresses admissions officers (and others). He offers a three-step plan for highschoolers:
Newport is targeting high school students who want to get into their dream college. He's trying to get them to stop doing boring, depressing activities and instead do fun, creative, and useful stuff that both improves their short-run life (by making them more relaxed and less stressed) and impresses admissions officers.
Broad areas of agreement
Broad philosophical differences
Before getting into the nuts and bolts of what I think Newport gets right and wrong, I want to talk of some broad differences between Newport (as he presents himself) and me. A few things I find somewhat jarring in Newport's writing:
I'm curious to know what readers' main areas of disagreement with Newport are, and/or whether my listed areas of disagreement make sense to readers.
Cross-posted to Quora and the Cognito Mentoring blog.