Do you mean that organizations aren’t very good at selecting the best person for each job.
Actually, no. What I mean is that human society isn’t very good at realizing that it would be in its best interest to assign as many high-IQ persons as possible the job of “being themselves” full-time and freely developing their ideas—without having to justify their short-term benefit.
Hell, forget “as many as possible”, we don’t even have a Bell Labs any more.
This, I think, is a special case of what I meant. A simple, crude, way to put the general point is that people don’t defer enough to those who are smarter. If they did, smart folks would be held in higher esteem by society, and indeed would consequently have greater autonomy.
Actually, no. What I mean is that human society isn’t very good at realizing that it would be in its best interest to assign as many high-IQ persons as possible the job of “being themselves” full-time and freely developing their ideas—without having to justify their short-term benefit.
Hell, forget “as many as possible”, we don’t even have a Bell Labs any more.
This, I think, is a special case of what I meant. A simple, crude, way to put the general point is that people don’t defer enough to those who are smarter. If they did, smart folks would be held in higher esteem by society, and indeed would consequently have greater autonomy.
How should society implement this? I repeat my claim that other personal characteristics are as important as IQ.
I do not know of a working society-wide solution. Establishing research institutes in the tradition of Bell Labs would be a good start, though.