Recently thinking about effective sibling relationships wrt startups, e.g. @kimbal/@elonmusk & @patrickc/@collision. A natural, fully-trustworthy partner who’s easy to sync with = massive force multiplier, w/ compounding effects from childhood on?
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Replying to @webdevMason @kimbal and
Forget trusting/syncing w/siblings - I've always been a little perplexed at the lack of *identical twins* among really successful people. (There's a slight health/intelligence penalty being a twin, yes, but that doesn't seem remotely enough to explain the absence.)
7 replies 1 retweet 30 likes -
Huh. That’s bizarre. Any theories?
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Replying to @webdevMason @kimbal and
Not sure. Coordination is overrated? Being different in a collaboration is in fact extremely important? One twin is, despite genetics/upbringing, still too likely to be a 'weakest link' and hold the other back/be jettisoned? Twinship itself destroys creativity/risk-taking?
2 replies 0 retweets 10 likes -
Replying to @gwern @webdevMason and
I've previously wondered if (unconsciously) people only seek to excel if they have cues telling them that there is an empty high place they stand a good chance of doing best in, thereby gaining status in exchange for their risks. Maybe a twin never feels best enough.
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Replying to @ESYudkowsky @gwern and
They are extremely successful, they just have to hide it. Do you really think
@elonmusk is just one person?1 reply 1 retweet 6 likes
Someone already suggested that, but I agree, that would be by far the most entertaining explanation.
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