Ben,
I kind of disagree with you. First, what we call “general intelligence” is itself a form of specialized intelligence: specializing optimizing successful outcomes in real time in our apparent reality. so the mix you recommend in “achieving great things” would itself be “general intelligence”, not general intelligence plus something else (other than luck).
Since most people who “achieve great things” seem to me to be playing life at least in part as a poker game (they don’t seem to put all their cards out on the table) I think outcomes may be a better measure than propaganda. “Increasingly, as one ages, one worries more about what one DOES, rather than about abstract characterizations of one’s capability.” I’m not sure that comes from wisdom, rather than the rationally adjusted propaganda of an older person (look at my status enabled institutional power to achieve) contrasted with that of the younger person (look at my superior capabilities, with a brain at its physical prime).
Ben,
I kind of disagree with you. First, what we call “general intelligence” is itself a form of specialized intelligence: specializing optimizing successful outcomes in real time in our apparent reality. so the mix you recommend in “achieving great things” would itself be “general intelligence”, not general intelligence plus something else (other than luck).
Since most people who “achieve great things” seem to me to be playing life at least in part as a poker game (they don’t seem to put all their cards out on the table) I think outcomes may be a better measure than propaganda. “Increasingly, as one ages, one worries more about what one DOES, rather than about abstract characterizations of one’s capability.” I’m not sure that comes from wisdom, rather than the rationally adjusted propaganda of an older person (look at my status enabled institutional power to achieve) contrasted with that of the younger person (look at my superior capabilities, with a brain at its physical prime).