🧠🌐 The Brilliance Dividend
Deep Dives
Explore related topics with these Wikipedia articles, rewritten for enjoyable reading:
-
Economies of agglomeration
13 min read
The article mentions 'an experiment in agglomeration that would thrill urban economists' - understanding how clustering of talent and industry creates economic advantages is central to the piece's thesis about high-IQ concentration driving growth
-
The Bell Curve
14 min read
The article's core premise about 'brilliants' and how frontier economies 'depend disproportionately on their most able citizens' directly parallels academic discussions of cognitive stratification and its economic implications
-
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
12 min read
One of the futuristic cities is named for Leibniz - while readers may know Newton and Tesla, Leibniz's polymathic contributions to mathematics, philosophy, and early computing are less widely understood and exemplify the 'brilliance' theme
🧠🌐 The Brilliance Dividend
My fellow pro-growth/progress/abundance Up Wingers in America and around the world:
In Marcus Sakey’s Brilliance trilogy, American society is upended by the arrival of “brilliants” — the one percent born with cognitive gifts that amount to supercharged pattern recognition. These brainy X-Men analogues read micro-expressions like polygraphs, move through crowds as if solving physics equations in real time, and divine financial market signals from what seems to others like random statistical noise.
Alas, a spectacular terrorist attack, pinned on the gifted, becomes the pretext for surveillance and persecution. Many brilliants flee to a vast stretch of Wyoming bought by a tech titan with a $300 billion fortune (an amount that must have seemed fanciful when Sakey wrote the books a decade ago). The New Canaan Holdfast becomes a country-within-a-country: an electrified, solar-fed archipelago of futuristic cities named for Newton, Tesla and Leibniz.1 It’s part high-IQ refuge, part techno-accelerator — an experiment in agglomeration that would thrill urban economists.
(Also: If you think the NCH sounds a bit like Israel, you wouldn’t be the first.
High IQ equals high economic growth
If only America itself functioned more as a continent-spanning Holdfast. Frontier-pushing economies like ours depend disproportionately on their most able citizens.
This excerpt is provided for preview purposes. Full article content is available on the original publication.
