A good lawyer will sue the homeowner for slip and fall damages.Too bad, too bad. Karma is best served cold.
And win.
A good lawyer will sue the homeowner for slip and fall damages.Too bad, too bad. Karma is best served cold.
Two points come to mind.
Two points come to mind.
First, @14:00, he talks about how information that is presented with high confidence is more likely to be accepted and followed, independent of whether the information is correct.
This is exactly the point that I make all the time about the biggest issue with ChatGPT and other LLMs -- people are naturally inclined to accept results that are firmly stated as facts, even when they are glaringly wrong.
Second, the video only talks about the "advantages" of overconfidence in terms of the ability to influence others. But I think that it is far more central to our success as a species. As a species, humans are risk takers and many of the advances that have allowed us to dominate our surroundings are largely the results of people being willing to take extreme risks, whether physical or economic.
Consider that humans are possibly one of the most ill-suited species on the planet to actually surviving in the wild. We can't tolerate conditions outside of a very narrow temperature range, we aren't particularly fast, strong, or agile compared to other animals. We lack the ability to dig in the ground effectively, and even if we were to accept the role of carrion eaters, our physical ability to tear apart a carcass isn't very great, and that's assuming we could successfully compete with other carrion eaters to get access to it in the first place. Raw intelligence only gets you so far. We might figure out how to craft simple tools to dig roots or trap small animals. But going much beyond that requires being willing to take risks in order to test and refine the tools and techniques that allowed us to challenge other animals that were far better equipped naturally, and those tests involved people stepping up and being willing to try those tools and techniques by challenging those animals -- and probably losing a lot of those challenges while the survivors observed and learned and proceeded to make adjustments before stepping up and making their own challenge, confident that they had figured out how not to get killed like the last guy got.
I've no compassion for her.
- In a sharp shift in tone, the latest outlook from the world’s top energy agency signals that oil demand could keep growing through to 2050.
- The International Energy Agency had previously estimated a peak in global fossil fuel demand by 2030 and said there should be an end to new investments in coal, oil and gas projects to reach net zero emissions by the middle of the century.
- OPEC welcomed what it described as the IEA’s “rendezvous with reality.”
And how many people will bother to attach that cord to the door after the third or fourth time?At age 11, Andrew Pelham invented the E-Z Baby Saver: a cord linking the driver’s door to the back seat so you’re reminded to look back before exiting the car. He crafted it using rubber bands and duct tape for a contest, hoping to prevent tragic child deaths in hot cars.
Understand your own questions?Question your own understanding.
How would you like to walk into a strange place and start eating all the mushrooms?I think it's a pretty well-established and widely known fact that the food served at the first thanksgiving was mostly if not all native to the Americas.
But I'm betting the booze was European.![]()
The answer to his question of whether we ever learned in school that corn was native to the Americas is yes. It was also emphasized that the first Thanksgiving was a thank you by the pilgrims to the Indians (that's what they were called back then) for teaching them how to grow native crops successfully after the colony was almost wiped out because the crop seeds brought from Europe failed to yield.