Re: Some Heroes

post by lsusr · 2020-05-12T09:30:56.012Z · LW · GW · 2 comments

Contents

  1. Albert Einstein
  2. Leonardo da Vinci
  3. Steve (Woz) Wozniak
  4. Catherine the Great
  5. 秦始皇
  6. Paul Graham
  Conclusion
None
2 comments

Dear Paul Graham,

I liked your essay Some Heroes so much I copied it. My criterion are the same as yours.

Sincerely,

Lsusr


Einstein isn't on the list, for example, even though he probably deserves to be on any shortlist of admirable people. I once asked a physicist friend if Einstein was really as smart as his fame implies, and she said that yes, he was. So why isn't he on the list? Because I had to ask. This is a list of people who've influenced me, not people who would have if I understood their work.

…When I thought about what it meant to call someone a hero, it meant I'd decide what to do by asking what they'd do in the same situation. That's a stricter standard than admiration.

Some Heroes by Paul Graham

1. Albert Einstein

Einstein asked himself how God would design the Universe and then reverse engineered it. He didn't use science to solve problems. He solved problems with sheer intelligence and then used science to prove himself right.

This method didn't just crack relativity. Einstein could deduce the quantization of matter from a single graph of a single macroscopic phenomenon. He worked out special relativity from practically no data at all [LW · GW]. Then he cracked general relativity before science had caught up with him.

Einstein held himself to the standard of God. When I do physics [LW · GW] and math [LW · GW], I hold myself to the standard of Einstein.

2. Leonardo da Vinci

His most impressive work, to me, is his drawings. They're clearly made more as a way of studying the world than producing something beautiful. And yet they can hold their own with any work of art ever made. No one else, before or since, was that good when no one was looking.

Some Heroes by Paul Graham

Leonardo was the Isaac Asimov of the Renaissance. Leonardo was an engineer the same way Isaac Asimov was a robotocist. This is the standard I hold myself to when I write about antimemetics [? · GW].

3. Steve (Woz) Wozniak

When Woz was a kid there was nothing he wanted more than a computer. He couldn't afford one so he designed his own in his imagination over and over again. He figured out how to build one cheaper and cheaper until eventually he could assemble one from off-the-shelf parts.

I want an artificial intelligence the way Woz wanted a computer.

Woz could get components to do things they were never intended to accomplish because he understands how computers work down to the level of individual electrons. This is the standard I hold myself to when I think about software.

Perhaps most importantly, Steve Wozniak still believes in magic [LW · GW]. He is great at teaching little kids.

4. Catherine the Great

The young not-yet-Catherine not-yet-the-Great was a brilliant strategist. She played tight and aggressive. I cannot do justice to her story. Instead, check out Catherine the Great: Portrait of A Woman by Robert Massie.

Considering the hand she was dealt, just becoming Empress of Russia would be sufficient to put Catherine the Great on this list. But she didn't stop there. Catherine the Empress attempted to reshape the world's largest feudal empire into Enlightenment ideals and it wasn't a complete disaster—despite the fact that her political power flowed from the aristocracy!

Yes, I have a crush on her.

5. 秦始皇

秦始皇 conquered all of contiguous civilization and then invented China. He constructed systems intended to last for 10,000 years.

The biggest mistake 秦始皇 made was chasing immortality before the technology was ready. I think about 秦始皇 when I choose not to sign up for cryogenics.

6. Paul Graham

Paul Graham used to write software that writes software. Then he founded a software startup. Then he founded a startup that starts software startups. Now he writes software that writes software that writes software. Paul Graham is the ultimate metaprogrammer.

I never imagine what Paul Graham would "do in the same situation". I follow the explicit instructions on his blog.

Conclusion

There are lots of commonalities between the people on this list. For instance, they are all determined polydidacts. But so are many people who didn't make this list.

What really sets my heroes apart is the standards they held themselves to. They all worked forward from reality and backwards from perfection until the two met in the middle.

2 comments

Comments sorted by top scores.

comment by Jay · 2020-05-12T21:09:51.681Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Could we get a Romanization of #5? Some of us are modestly familiar with Chinese history while simultaneously baffled by a written language that appears to consist mainly of several thousand subtly different drawings of sheds.

Replies from: Raemon
comment by Raemon · 2020-05-12T21:18:03.078Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Turns out you can actually just google chinese characters. (I don't mean this to be dismissive, just noting a thing you can do in the future that I wasn't even sure would work 30 seconds ago)

When I google "秦始皇" I get:

Qin Shi Huang, previously Zheng, King of Qin, personal name Yíng Zhèng or Zhào Zhèng, was the founder of the Qin dynasty and the first emperor of a unified China. He became China's first emperor when he was 38 after the Qin had conquered all of the other Warring States and unified all of China in 221 BC.