I think there’s more value to just remembering/knowing a lot of things than I have previously thought. One example is that one way LLMs are useful is by aggregating a lot of knowledge from basically anything even remotely common or popular. (At the same time this shifts the balance towards outsourcing, but that’s beside the point.)
I still wouldn’t update much on this. Wikipedia articles, and especially the articles you want to use for this exercise, are largely about established knowledge. But of course there are a lot of questions whose answers are not commonly agreed upon, or which we really don’t have good answers to, and which we really want answers to. Think of e.g. basically all of the research humanity is doing.
The eleventh virtue is scholarship, but don’t forget about the others.
I think there’s more value to just remembering/knowing a lot of things than I have previously thought. One example is that one way LLMs are useful is by aggregating a lot of knowledge from basically anything even remotely common or popular. (At the same time this shifts the balance towards outsourcing, but that’s beside the point.)
I still wouldn’t update much on this. Wikipedia articles, and especially the articles you want to use for this exercise, are largely about established knowledge. But of course there are a lot of questions whose answers are not commonly agreed upon, or which we really don’t have good answers to, and which we really want answers to. Think of e.g. basically all of the research humanity is doing.
The eleventh virtue is scholarship, but don’t forget about the others.