| That’s exactly the distinction SVITLO tries to make:
It doesn't claim to detect “confirmed brilliance” — only its early cognitive signals. We’re not trying to guess who will become famous.
We’re looking for patterns in thinking — rare cognitive traits like: connecting distant concepts, reframing assumptions, exploring without anchoring, compressing complex ideas with clarity. These are not “proofs” of genius — but signals often found in people whose ideas later change paradigms. Einstein isn’t brilliant because the Eddington experiment confirmed him.
He’s brilliant because his thought experiments, reframings of space-time, and fearless simplicity were already cognitive anomalies. SVITLO wants to notice those anomalies — before the Eddington moment. |
you should consider what a tool will be used for when in the hands of the morally constipated.