I recently had the privilege of a 1-hour speaking slot at SPARC, a yearly two-week camp for top high school math students.
Here's the video: Wisdom for Smart Teens
Instead of picking a single topic, I indulged in a bunch of mini-topics that I feel passionate about:
- Original Sight
- "Emperor has no clothes" moments
- Epistemology is cool
- Think quantitatively
- Be specific / use examples
- Organizations are inefficient
- How I use Bayesianism
- Be empathizable
- Communication
- Simplify
- Startups
- What you want
I enjoyed it, thanks for sharing. (Btw, are there more general, practical utility lectures like this?)
When you talk about being underwhelmed with other students, could you go into detail what criteria you'd specifically assess when making that judgment?
I've noticed that most intellectual doujins tend to think of themselves as particularly special and of other people as not quite as much, even if the empirical evidence isn't all that convincing (Mensa can be notoriously bad about this, so is the "I have goals!" self-help crowd), so I always take some time to look at the actual data before adopting a similar belief.
Re general lectures, I also have a couple more of my own at liron.me/talks.