Layers of Expertise and the Curse of Curiosity

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/7vQT9KwkKrf8i7HN4/layers-of-expertise-and-the-curse-of-curiosity

Epistemic status: oversimplification of a process I’m confident about; meant as proof of concept. Related to: Double-Dipping in Dunning-Kruger Expertise comes in different, mostly independent layers. To illustrate them, I will describe the rough process of a curious mind discovering a field of study. Discovery In the beginning, the Rookie knows nothing. They have no way to tell what’s true or false in the field. Anything they say about it will probably be nonsense, or at best, not better than chance. Consider a child discovering astronomy. They know the Sun and the Moon move in the sky, that other planets and stars exist, but they wonder about the mysterious domain of space. They open a book, or watch a few videos, and their first discoveries are illuminating. The Moon goes around the Earth which goes around the Sun, the other stars are very very far. Everything makes sense, because beginner material is *designed *to make sense. The basic facts are overwhelming. They feel so valuable and wondrous that they have to be shared with other children. They know nothing! The knowledge gap is so large that the enlightened child is viewed as an Expert, and for a while the little explorer does feel like one. However, the child is still a Rookie. They start talking about how planets go in perfect circles around the Sun, that there’s nothing but interstellar space beyond Pluto except maybe comets, because introductory material is fuzzy on the details. The child may be overconfident, until someone more educated points out the mistake. Then Curiosity kicks in. Learning iteration When discovering gaps in their knowledge, one with a curious mind will strive to fill them. They will seek new material, kind teachers, and if they’re lucky they’ll learn more and more. This is the first layer of expertise: accumulation of true facts. Repeatedly, they will be confronted with their own ignorance: for each new shard of knowledge they reveal, dozens appear still shrouded. Every time they think they’ve exhausted the field, an unexpected complexity will show them wrong. At some point they will internalize the pattern: the field is deep, and full of more details than they can learn in a lifetime. They will be cautious about their learning process, acknowledging they may be wrong, that their models of reality aren’t perfect, that they don’t know all there is to know about their field. This is the second layer of expertise: realization of one’s limitations. Faced with the ever-incomplete nature of their discoveries, the curious mind will still learn, and eventually hit against the open problems of their field. Suddenly, reaching new knowledge is much more expensive. The frontier is full of conjectures, uncertainties and gaps. Venturing outside the well-studied questions comes with the risk of accidentally spouting nonsense. We can’t have that! After learning so much, making Rookie mistakes would be unforgivable, wouldn’t it? Underconfident experts A failure mode appears when an Expert confuses:

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https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/7vQT9KwkKrf8i7HN4/layers-of-expertise-and-the-curse-of-curiosity?commentId=a5RxRjk4CT9KWKZfq

I’ve often wondered how far we could get if our training systems consisted less of one-to-many instruction and instead focused on deeply monitored, iterated group performance. The latter is how the most extreme environments operate, like space missions and the military, but the expense is hard to justify. On the other hand, I don’t know of any middle-ground attempts at doing this for more routine environments. Doing such training for a standard office environment, which relies on standard consumer hardware and has no unusual safety or performance requirements, is doubtless much cheaper. How much cheaper would it have to be, and what kind of performance would it have to deliver, to make it worth considering as an alternative to the standard model of education? As I write this it occurs to me that most of the distinction is down to the environment, and this model could easily suffer from a lack of emphasis on the value-added tasks that companies are concerned with. Of course, formal education does not provide any focus on those tasks either; the degree just offers some confidence that once provided with them, they can be accomplished.