| ▲ | 9rx 3 hours ago | |||||||
You're right, but learning can take place when you need it. There is no real advantage to learning something ahead of time. The bottleneck is having awareness of what is out there to learn. You can't learn about what you don't know exists. Looking at calculus solutions all day should give a sense of what calculus can be used for, so that it is in your back pocket when the time you need it comes. Well, at least it used to be the bottleneck. Nowadays you can just ask an LLM. For all their faults, they are really good at letting you know about what tools exist in out there in the world, surfacing more than you could ever come to know about even if all you did was read about what exists all day, every day. | ||||||||
| ▲ | dyauspitr an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I believe to count as an expert on something you need to have a ready compendium of knowledge ready to go. It becomes very hard to tackle problems or gain deep insights if you don’t already have knowledgeable people that have thought deeply about a particular space. Maybe when we have supremely reliable LLMs that can replace humans we might not but we’re not there yet. | ||||||||
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