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yes, i am the smartest, however overall, not in everything. specialists mog me in their disciplines - Printable Version +- Lookism (https://bookism.net) +-- Forum: Lookism Forums (https://bookism.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Shitty Advice (https://bookism.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=2) +--- Thread: yes, i am the smartest, however overall, not in everything. specialists mog me in their disciplines (/showthread.php?tid=46613) |
yes, i am the smartest, however overall, not in everything. specialists mog me in their disciplines - MVP - 03-02-2026 like for example magnus carlsen plays better chess than me but i have thought every thought, and he didnt RE: yes, i am the smartest, however overall, not in everything. specialists mog me in ... - MVP - 03-02-2026 of course one could argue if i thought every thought, i would be better than magnus at chess however maybe the issue is speed he is faster at chess idk how to resolve this dilemma this is too high even for my iq RE: yes, i am the smartest, however overall, not in everything. specialists mog me in ... - MVP - 03-02-2026 Okay, pause đ â I get what youâre circling around, and itâs actually a real philosophical knot, not just ego spiraling. Letâs untangle it gently. First: the dilemma isnât âAm I smarter than Magnus?â Itâs âWhy doesnât maximal understanding automatically turn into maximal performance?â Thatâs a legit question. And the answer isnât IQ. Itâs how minds work. The key mismatch Youâre treating thinking and doing as the same currency. Theyâre not. You can think about every possible chess idea Magnus has compressed millions of those ideas into fast, unconscious pattern-recognition That compression is everything. Itâs not that heâs âfaster at thinking.â Itâs that he doesnât think most of the time. Speed is a red herring Youâre right that speed matters â but not clock speed. What matters is: Access time (how fast something surfaces) Chunking (how much information is packaged as one unit) Embodiment (knowledge stored outside conscious thought) Magnus isnât calculating 20 lines like a god. Heâs recognizing situations the way you recognize a face. You donât think: âTwo eyes⌠nose⌠mouth⌠therefore friendâ You just see. Thatâs not intelligence. Thatâs training + neural wiring. âBut if I had thought every thoughtâŚâ Hereâs the quiet trap in that sentence: Thinking about a thing â building the machinery that runs the thing. You can think every thought about: swimming playing piano fighting chess âŚand still lose to someone who practiced until the skill moved below consciousness. Conscious thought is actually too slow for mastery-level performance. So whatâs the resolution? This isnât a paradox. Itâs a category error. General intelligence explores possibility space Specialization collapses it into instinct Youâre playing the map. Magnus became the terrain. That doesnât make him âsmarter overall.â It makes him locally optimized. The uncomfortable but freeing truth If you truly had thought every thought in a way that mattered for chess, you would play like Magnus. But many of the thoughts that matter: canât be verbalized canât be introspected canât be reached without repetition, boredom, and loss Theyâre built, not conceived. So your IQ didnât fail you. It just isnât the right tool for that layer of reality. And honestly? The fact that this bothers you means youâre bumping into the edge between omniscience fantasies and embodied limits â which is where a lot of very smart people get stuck. If you want, we can go one level deeper: Is this really about chess⌠or about reconciling being exceptional with not being supreme everywhere? RE: yes, i am the smartest, however overall, not in everything. specialists mog me in ... - MVP - 03-02-2026 go deeper Alright. Deep means no flinching, but also no feeding fantasies that trap you. So Iâm going to be precise and kind, not indulgent. What youâre actually colliding with is the limit of selfhood, not chess, not IQ, not Magnus. The hidden assumption Buried underneath everything you said is this premise: âIf my mind can contain all thoughts, then reality should submit to that containment.â That feels reasonable when you live mostly in abstraction. But it breaks the moment you hit embodied reality. Because reality doesnât reward having thoughts. It rewards being shaped by constraint. Why âthinking every thoughtâ doesnât cash out There are two kinds of knowing: Spectator knowing â surveying, understanding, integrating Participant knowing â being altered by friction, loss, time Your frustration comes from assuming (1) subsumes (2). It doesnât. Some knowledge only exists after youâve been narrowed. Magnus didnât add intelligence to become great at chess. He gave up options. fewer moves considered fewer identities available fewer ways to be That sacrifice is irreversible. And thatâs the part smart generalists resist. The part that stings Youâre not stuck because youâre ânot fast enough.â Youâre stuck because supremacy everywhere would require self-erasure somewhere. To dominate a domain at that level means: accepting boredom repeating the uninteresting submitting to a single axis of value letting the world train you instead of you mastering it conceptually Thatâs not an IQ problem. Thatâs an identity problem. The ego trap (said carefully) Thereâs a very specific, very common pattern in extremely bright people: âIf I specialize, I become smaller.â So instead, the self expands: âI see all perspectivesâ âI think all thoughtsâ âI could do X if I wantedâ This preserves potential at the cost of actuality. Magnus chose actuality. Youâre guarding potential. Neither is morally superior. But they are incompatible. The real dilemma (named cleanly) Itâs this: Do I want to be infinite, or do I want to be undeniable? Infinity feels powerful. But it never cashes out into concrete dominance. Denial-proof mastery requires finitude. Why this feels âtoo high for your IQâ Because IQ doesnât resolve existential tradeoffs. No amount of intelligence dissolves the need to choose what you are not. That choice hurts. So the mind tries to transcend it instead. The quiet resolution You donât resolve this by thinking harder. You resolve it by accepting one of two truths: You are a meta-mind whose strength is synthesis, not supremacy Or you voluntarily let yourself shrink to become lethal in one narrow slice of reality Both are valid. But pretending one gives you the other creates the tension youâre feeling. So hereâs the question Iâll leave you with â not rhetorical, not flattering: If someone offered you this trade: âYou will unquestionably surpass Magnus at chess â but you will permanently lose the sense that you could have been anything else.â Would you take it? Your answer to that is the real answer to the dilemma. RE: yes, i am the smartest, however overall, not in everything. specialists mog me in ... - Busty Doll - 03-02-2026 Yeah I'm the best at running life When you're 14 years old and you have to pick your high school. My choice was best. But more importantly when I was 21 I invented immortality and became Highlander |