to plant a non-threatening seed of skepticism into the minds of all present.
I kind of tried to do that, by making sure all my comments in the discussion afterwards were about the actual physics content, and reductionism, and how scientific ideas are evaluated… But I’m not incredibly charismatic, or especially good at breaking physics down into easily-teachable segments on the spot, and I think most people’s reaction was to assume I was really smart and then stop trying to understand anything. (At least six people asked me if I’d thought about switching my major to physics...I had to explain that I hadn’t because I’m not actually really smart, at least not enough to be a good theoretical physicist, and if the choice is between being a mediocre-to-poor physicist or an awesome nurse, I’d pick being an awesome nurse any day.)
In your LW articles, you come off as both charismatic and intelligent. You have interesting insights, you’re willing and able to post your thoughts (and they’re frequently even not-in-sync with the general LW zeigeist), you use lots of engaging personal examples… Are you sure you’re not being humble or maintaining a wrong self-image for some other reason?
In your LW articles, you come off as both charismatic and intelligent.
I think my intelligence is above average (general population average, not LW average), but that’s not at all the same thing as being intelligent enough to be a good physicist...although I think that may not be my true rejection, and I’m going to try and spend some more time finding out what my true rejection is.
Also, LW is an entirely written forum and I’m very confident in writing, and have a lot of experience. I’m not as good a public speaker: I don’t have as much practice, and there’s the added challenge of not having time to sit staring at a screen for five minutes trying to decide if my argument is phrased unclearly and I need to fix it. So stuff comes out a lot less elegantly when I’m saying it to people, and I tend to say “um” and “uh” a lot, or sound a bit incoherent because my brain isn’t running at the same rate as my mouth.
I’m not sure if you’d want to pay money for negative reinforcement, but I’ve been thinking about trying out something like the Buzzword to help with my verbal tics.
You can be a very good experimental physicist if you’re creative enough to devise good experiments, careful enough to implement them well, and persistent enough to then carry them out. Intelligence helps in the first two stages, but being an ace at math is not required.
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I kind of tried to do that, by making sure all my comments in the discussion afterwards were about the actual physics content, and reductionism, and how scientific ideas are evaluated… But I’m not incredibly charismatic, or especially good at breaking physics down into easily-teachable segments on the spot, and I think most people’s reaction was to assume I was really smart and then stop trying to understand anything. (At least six people asked me if I’d thought about switching my major to physics...I had to explain that I hadn’t because I’m not actually really smart, at least not enough to be a good theoretical physicist, and if the choice is between being a mediocre-to-poor physicist or an awesome nurse, I’d pick being an awesome nurse any day.)
In your LW articles, you come off as both charismatic and intelligent. You have interesting insights, you’re willing and able to post your thoughts (and they’re frequently even not-in-sync with the general LW zeigeist), you use lots of engaging personal examples… Are you sure you’re not being humble or maintaining a wrong self-image for some other reason?
I think my intelligence is above average (general population average, not LW average), but that’s not at all the same thing as being intelligent enough to be a good physicist...although I think that may not be my true rejection, and I’m going to try and spend some more time finding out what my true rejection is.
Also, LW is an entirely written forum and I’m very confident in writing, and have a lot of experience. I’m not as good a public speaker: I don’t have as much practice, and there’s the added challenge of not having time to sit staring at a screen for five minutes trying to decide if my argument is phrased unclearly and I need to fix it. So stuff comes out a lot less elegantly when I’m saying it to people, and I tend to say “um” and “uh” a lot, or sound a bit incoherent because my brain isn’t running at the same rate as my mouth.
I’m not sure if you’d want to pay money for negative reinforcement, but I’ve been thinking about trying out something like the Buzzword to help with my verbal tics.
You can be a very good experimental physicist if you’re creative enough to devise good experiments, careful enough to implement them well, and persistent enough to then carry them out. Intelligence helps in the first two stages, but being an ace at math is not required.
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Unsuprisingly, there is a short story about that http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Country_of_the_Blind.
Fixed link.