Depends on what you define success, actually.
Most people here like science and everything around it so eliminating cognitive biases is EXTREMELY important in order to reach their goal.
Most people on the outside however are more obsessed about money or status and so are probably going to benefit from some degree of rationality, but anything else is probably dimnishing returns for one reason or another.ff
I'd say Eliezer put a higher standard on "Human" rather than what your average clubgoer thinks of.
Again it depends on how you define success.
In other words, epistemic rationality is not instrumental rationality.
Most people here like science and everything around it so eliminating cognitive biases is EXTREMELY important in order to reach their goal.
The potential rewards of epistemic rationality for a society are very high.
However, it doesn't follow that everyone needs to be an epistemic rationalist, and it also doesn't necessarily follow that anyone has to remove all their biases individually, since biases can be allowed to cancel out in collective rationality.
I am a newbie so today I read the article by Eliezer Yudkowski "Your Strength As A Rationalist" which helped me understand the focus of LessWrong, but I respectfully disagreed with a line that is written in the last paragraph:
So this was my comment in the article's comment section which I bring here for discussion:
Edit 1: I realize there is change in the environment and that may make some of our cognitive biases, which were useful in the past, to be obsolete. If the word "flaw" is also applicable to describe something that is obsolete then I was wrong above. If not, I prefer the word obsolete to characterize cognitive biases that are no longer functional for our preservation.