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by GDC7
1739 days ago
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> Well sure, but those motivations exist regardless of any financial rewards The amount of the financial reward measures how much you are winning. The juices produced when you win 20$ and those produced when your leveraged long in biotech stocks make you 750k are not the same. > They usually involve a lot of people working very hard to no end. This is just a pessimistic outlook. Most stuff fails but the few thing that stick produce a big improvement. And it's not just billionaires who face this problem. Government has an even worse success rate, but the home runs are paradigm shifts. The failures burn a lot, think about the CERN failure, that's 20B right there. The ITER fusion seems to be the same thing and that's 50B The ISS never recovered the initial investment made, that's 100B. It's not just billionaires projects wasting money |
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> The amount of the financial reward measures how much you are winning. The juices produced when you win 20$ and those produced when your leveraged long in biotech stocks make you 750k are not the same.
I suspect the world might a better place if we gave fewer people who are motivated in this financial manner, and more people who are motivated by the impact of their work (of whom there are plenty, and they're just as good as the financially motivated ones).