Give Me 18 Minutes and I’ll Make you Dangerously Smart (with AI)
How to Use AI to Enhance Your Intelligence
The Tragic Misuse of AI
- Many individuals are allowing AI to diminish their critical thinking skills, effectively training it to replace them.
- The top 1% utilize AI differently; they leverage it as a tool for cognitive enhancement rather than merely seeking answers.
Framework for Smart AI Utilization
Step One: Intelligent Laziness
- A study indicates that CEOs waste 72% of their time in unproductive meetings due to completion bias, which drives them to seek dopamine from finishing tasks.
- Tasks are often treated equally despite differing impacts; this leads to priority blindness where all tasks seem urgent but yield little value.
Understanding Task Value Curves
- Two curves illustrate task payoff:
- Capped Payoff Curve: Tasks like formatting or internal emails yield diminishing returns after a point.
- Uncapped Payoff Curve: Engaging in high-impact tasks (e.g., product design, customer interactions) can exponentially solve problems.
Outsourcing with AI
- The top 1% delegate low-value tasks (zone one) to focus on high-value activities (zone two). This is facilitated by the DRAG framework:
- D = Drafting: Overcome the blank page problem using AI-generated first drafts.
- R = Research: Utilize AI for rapid information gathering and summarization.
- A = Analysis: Allow AI to identify patterns in unstructured data.
- G = Grunt Work: Delegate repetitive manual tasks like data cleaning and formatting.
Key Principles of the DRAG Framework
- Apply the DRAG framework only when operating within zone one. For tasks requiring human judgment or creativity, engage personally.
Step Two: The Intelligent Hill
- Historical perspectives shifted from viewing the universe as predictable (Newtonian physics) to recognizing its probabilistic nature at quantum levels (Heisenberg's uncertainty principle).
Understanding AI: From Calculators to Intelligent Agents
The Nature of AI
- AI operates differently than traditional tools like calculators; it functions as a probability engine, providing varied responses to the same question.
- Unlike calculators, AI can generate creative answers but often fabricates information unless prompted for verification.
- Effective interaction with AI requires careful question architecture rather than casual inquiries.
Climbing the Intelligent Hill
Camp 1: Oneshot Prompting
- In oneshot prompting, provide one clear example in your prompt to guide the model's response effectively.
Camp 2: Few Shot Prompting
- Few shot prompting involves giving three or more examples to help the model identify desired patterns and tones in responses.
- Grounding the model with relevant documents or previous work helps reduce hallucinations and enhances accuracy.
Camp 3: Chain of Thought Reasoning
- This method encourages explicit clarity by asking the model to show its reasoning process before responding.
- Prompts should encourage step-by-step thinking, which aids in reducing inaccuracies in outputs.
Camp 4: Agents
- AI agents are already impacting industries significantly, such as driving $67 billion in sales during Cyber Week according to Salesforce.
- Using an agentic prompt allows you to delegate complex tasks efficiently by simulating hiring multiple specialists for research and analysis.
The Importance of Resistance in Learning
- While many use AI for efficiency, top performers understand that true intelligence is built through challenges and resistance rather than convenience.
The Concept of an Intelligent Gym
Building Mental Strength Through Friction
- Just as physical muscles grow through resistance training, mental capabilities also require challenges; using AI should not eliminate this friction but enhance it.
Practical Application of Resistance
- Instead of outsourcing all cognitive tasks to AI, individuals should engage deeply with concepts first before seeking assistance from their "AI spotter."
Avoiding Atrophy
- Relying too heavily on AI can lead to mental atrophy similar to how astronauts experience muscle loss without gravity; balance is key.
How to Use AI for Progressive Learning
The Importance of Progressive Overload in Learning
- Introduces the concept of using AI to apply progressive overload in learning, structured into four levels:
- Level one: Quiz as if the learner is a high school student.
- Level two: Pose questions like a college professor.
- Level three: Challenge with executive-level interview questions.
- Level four: Test knowledge as if facing an intimidating boss.
Embracing the Fool's Advantage
- Discusses the fourth step in becoming smarter through AI, termed "the intelligent fool."
- Highlights that ego, not ignorance, is the biggest barrier to intelligence; emphasizes that smart individuals focus on what they don't know.
Cultural Shifts and Learning from Mistakes
- Uses Microsoft’s transformation under CEO Satya Nadella as an example of cultural change leading to success:
- Shifted from a culture of "know-it-alls" to "learn-it-alls."
- Allowed employees to admit gaps in their knowledge without fear.
Neuroplasticity and Continuous Learning
- Explains neuroplasticity—the brain's ability to rewire itself—occurs at the edge of one's abilities during moments of error and discomfort.
- Encourages embracing feelings of inadequacy as essential for learning; suggests using AI as a safe space for asking basic questions without judgment.
The Journey Back to Simplicity
- Advocates for returning to simplicity in mastery by continuously asking fundamental questions about complex topics.
- Concludes that true intelligence involves shedding pretenses and embracing lifelong learning, emphasizing authenticity over perfection.