I'm thinking of the ones that aren't that smart, but have the ability to sound as though they know what they are talking about when they don't. They get degrees in PPE from Oxford, and it's them that are running the country. Before long the country will be run by computers that aren't that smart but have the ability to sound convincing.Unfortunately, some of us are kinda smart but end up sounding extra stupid to some folks . Can't please everyone I guess. Either way, nosce te ipsum.
![]()
IAN has nailed an unfortunate reality: " but have the ability to sound convincing." It used to be that the folks who were a bit goofy would write their stuff and the extensive spelling errors would let us know immediately about the source. Then along came smart word processing and now both grammar and spelling can always be good. So the immediate tip-off is gone. So te task of evaluation is much more challenging.I'm thinking of the ones that aren't that smart, but have the ability to sound as though they know what they are talking about when they don't. They get degrees in PPE from Oxford, and it's them that are running the country. Before long the country will be run by computers that aren't that smart but have the ability to sound convincing.
Looks like a flawed assumption to me.The Dunning-Kruger-Effect is a very real thing.
.
.
.
What was said was that on average the unskilled individual does not overestimate their abilities for a given task. That contradicts that facet of the so called DK effect but it does not contradict the whole thing. To add to that, there are definitely people who grossly overestimate their abilities for a given task we've all met them from time to time, it's just not so on average. That means that for 100 dummies there will not be 80 that overestimate, there would be more like only 20. To add to that, I think there will be maybe 2 that grossly overestimate (ha ha)."" But according to the work of my colleagues and me,
the reality is that very few people are truly unskilled and unaware ""
ROFL !!!
How ironic !!!
He can't even compose a sentence correctly.
.
.
.

Hi,Now Mr Al has brought up an interesting and possibly rather disturbing concept: What happens when that whole different "BOX" becomes part of the alleged "thinking" inside a computer driven car??? Forget that obfuscation when they cal them "autonomous", that is just a dodge to cover up the reality that it is a computer, subject to every failure mode that computers tend to suffer from, that is doing the driving.
Consider that most humans and many animals continue to learn without weekly updates in thought their methods of thought processing.
OR, maybe I missed the train of thinking here.
Oh geeze, very sorry to hear that. That's one of the worst parts of life I think. A loss like that always seems to take part of us with it.Oh Wow!! that relationship sounds like we had at one very successful company. We were a team of folks who knew every aspect of what we were wanting to create to be the machine to do what our client required. Mechanical, hydraulical, and electrical controls. We could start with the list of requirements and create the moves for that, and then know what would make the moves and how it would be controlled. All in three or four hours. Then drawings and sketches and sequences in another meeting and then do the drawings. And for several years they were all perfect as built the first time. It was a fantastic trip while it lasted.
Two years ago I lost a friend who was the complement of what I knew.What I did not know he knew quite well. We were "the team". Then cancer and covid killed him. It is like part of my brain was removed, sort of. A very serious loss indeed.
I had a colleague at the Academy that was very much like that. He is an absolute genius, but my strengths were in areas that filled in holes in his, so we made a great team. We would sit around working on something and spend most of the time shooting down each others ideas with wild abandon. Got some really good work done that resulted in lots of papers being published and, incidentally, my PhD.Two years ago I lost a friend who was the complement of what I knew.What I did not know he knew quite well. We were "the team". Then cancer and covid killed him. It is like part of my brain was removed, sort of. A very serious loss indeed.