My intuition matches yours. But I was also including animals like social 
insects, bees, termites, etc. And I think it would be reasonable to scale this 
all the way down to prokaryotes. The point being that the extent to which an 
organism can *model* the world is mostly limited and extremely limited by the 
majority of us.

The over-estimation of the presence of, power of, and extent of any glob of 
cognition is a problem. This is where I think people like Deutsch (and many 
from the rationalist community) get it wrong. Because they're super smart, they 
tend to over-estimate the role of cognition.

On 1/22/20 7:29 AM, Pieter Steenekamp wrote:
> The distribution of a small number of big ones and very large number small 
> ones (like in a scale free network with a power law distribution) is an 
> emerging property of a complex system where agents interact with each other. 
> I don’t think human intellect distribution falls in this category. My guess 
> is that human intelligence approximately follows a normal distribution? I 
> think there are many average intelligent people on earth, few morons and 
> geniuses? 

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

Reply via email to