I call this "noticing confusion" (by way of @ESYudkowsky) and it's probably sufficient to be a singular hallmark of interesting people. The superpower comes from playing with what anomalies suggest about the explanations that fail to predict themhttps://twitter.com/paulg/status/1147505767039287296 …
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I don't mean to pick on my "natural diet" answerers too much, because they're answering in a way that makes sense in a world where you're treated like you must've gotten kicked in the head if you suggest that sharks not eating people is some great mystery
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A subskill of this process is noticing when an explanation doesn't contain new information, e.g. "the gods did it." Another is simulating a lack of familiarity with the world such that you can make predictions from explanation even after seeing the answer at the back of the book
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If you're a smart person who values being smart, it's critical that you notice that "because of evolutionary processes" isn't all that different from "because of the gods" if that's where your thinking terminates
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Smart people who value being smart can be very bad at noticing confusion in part because being good at it sometimes makes you look very naive and childlike, and can therefore threaten the social goods you're accustomed to getting for intelligence
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Peter Thiel helped make noticing confusion trendy by pointing out that certain secrets hiding in plain sight can translate to big money. Unfortunately, people can get very frustrated looking for high-value secrets if they have no practice looking for low-value secrets
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Because secret-seeking can look weird and foolish, people are usually only willing to look for secrets with cash value. But the people who find these are mostly weirdos, people who are constitutionally incapable of being well-adjusted adults and gave up trying a long time ago
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It's an interesting story. The implicated sharks (ocean whitetips) apparently rarely go near shorelines and therefore encounter humans much less frequently than the white/tiger sharks that account for most bites
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If we assume hungry sharks bite into something and then continue or cease eating based on whether it tastes good or bad, "we taste bad" contains no more information than that provided in the question
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