Philosophy

I Don’t Think I’m Qualified

“I don’t think I’m qualified” are beautiful words

 

The observation of this text is not the rather obvious Dunning-Kruger effect

Scio me nihil scire

i.e. that the most ignorant are the most ignorant of their own ignorance

the most incompetent don’t even know they are incompetent

and that the most knowledgeable understand just how much is yet unknown

 

The observation of this text is a more general heuristic, which is:

Those who often say “I don’t know if I’m qualified” — are LIKELY far more QUALIFIED in general

 

Indeed there are many experts, who, in their expertise, have now been humbled into understanding just how little they know.

But OUTSIDE their expertise they didn’t have that humbling experience

And somehow they failed to GENERALISE the scio me nihil scire rule, the dunning-kruger effect

Despite KNOWING how often the most confident are the most ignorant and clueless — they themselves became confident despite being clueless

 

And again, it’s quite understandable

Because we have to be confident

We rarely have perfect information

But we MUST make a decision

So it’s understandable

But it’s not ideal

 

Ideal is to say “I don’t think I’m qualified”

BEFORE you even know if you’re qualified or not

Which is exactly when you will be tempted to assume that your observations and opinions are so insightful

 

Indeed the heuristic hinges on the fact that even very knowledgeable people, even in multiple disciplines, even very well aware of the Dunning-Kruger effect — they STILL rarely use those beautiful words:

“I don’t think I’m qualified”

It seems it really takes a certain true general wisdom, and general self-awareness, and intellectual integrity — to live by those words, live enlightened by awareness of one’s own ignorance

 

I like it as a heuristic

Take someone out of their area of expertise — and see how quick they are to announce:

“I don’t think I’m qualified”

“I don’t know”

“From the little I know it would seem…”

etc.

 

Idiots of course will never use this phrase

But some great geniuses will fail this test as well

The more you win, the more of an ultracrepidarian you become, alas

It’s a useful heuristic to know when to trust someone’s authority

It’s a useful heuristic to know when someone is poised to make a successful transition to a different field

 

To sum it up, again:

Being aware of the Dunning-Kruger effect, being aware of one’s area of expertise, is one thing

But to PRESUPPOSE one’s IGNORANCE, one’s LACK OF EXPERTISE — seems to take yet deeper level of epistemic humility

And the CRUX of the problem is that 99% of our decisions MUST BE MADE — DESPITE being ANYTHING but experts

So make those decisions

Just don’t forget that you’re clueless

And admit:

“I don’t think I’m qualified”

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