Dath Ilan is a parallel Earth on which human civilization has its act together, in ways that actual-Earth does not. Like actual-Earth, citizens of Dath Ilan sometimes take standardized tests, both to figure out what sort of jobs they'd be suited for, to make sure that its educational institutions are functioning, and to give people guidance about what they might want to study. Unlike Earth's, Dath Ilan's tests have had a lot of thought put into the choice of topics: rather a lot more economics, rather a lot less trigonometry and literature. Topics are selected based on cost/benefit; something that takes a long time to learn would need to be a lot more useful, or have major positive externalities to more people knowing it.
I want to create a test, that will tell people what topics they ought to learn, and enable people to make their knowledgeability legible.
What topics belong on it?
Suppose it were possible to write down a list of every fact or algorithm known by a living human being. This isn't impossible, if you could use an AI system to translate audio recordings of someone's entire life to text, and everything they ever read, you would have it in a file. Then you would map from [text] to [common fact or algorithm] by comparing thousands of these files and to fact or algorithm written in sources like encyclopedias. Or more likely you would find commonality with a clustering algorithm.
The "knowledge that pays the most rent" is either the most common fact or algorithm known by all humans, or the most common one that separates successful humans from failures. (if there is a measurable difference)
Then an education system adds the most value by teaching the or algorithms in order of greatest value to least value, or reordering in complexity tiers, and in each tier teaching the most value elements first until the time allotted for education is over.
If civics has any value at all, this algorithm would find it. (though as described it is subject agnostic)
It's just a thought experiment. It is improbable to ever come up. Once we have a way to create lists of all the things humans should know in order to be the best possible humans, well...
An AI system (in the 20-100 years when we can do this) could probably consume the same list. And 'think with' massive chunks of digital machinery that are very close to error-free, don't need to sleep, don't age, don't have agendas that aren't inherent in their utility function, and run at 4-5ghz instead of 1 khz. And learn in parallel from thousands... (read more)