Academics turned entrepreneurs are a red flag IMO. The need for status becomes a habit that’s very hard to shake. Being a C student and having shaken off this need is better.
This isn’t necessarily good though it does seem more meritocratic. Even systems that seem incredibly broken are often working very well at something specific.
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Going corporate or professional means to bind status and ability. While there are downsides, it also generates social stability.
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Stabilized status means people know where to look. It creates order and reliability. This allows navigation and orientation, even if the landmarks are mcdonalds, apple products, and engineering/doctor degrees.
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If the sun came up in a different direction everyday it wouldn’t be fun novelty. It would mean something has gone terribly awry.
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Without externalized markers, the only way to navigate is based on popularity. The choice is between a faceless bureaucratic inhuman standard, or a fallible human. Each can be equally tyrannical.
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Human driven maps tend to have a shorter shelf life BUT they are self healing and have some flexibility. There’s room for heroic redemption stories. Moral judgement is both its greatest weakness and strength.
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Which is why maps that are driven by status are so unreliable. Pure status is fashionable flux so the only reliable anchor is self. The foundation of a status map is narcissism. The self *cannot* change b/c so much relies on it to be stable.
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End of conversation
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