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There is no such thing as 'ambition'

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My working definition is that ambition is basically neuroticism plus competitiveness, with the former defined as something like 'inability to accept one's self and one's situation uncritically' and the latter as simply 'desire to win'. At the extremes the 2x2 would be

(Low neuroticism)(low competitiveness)- Laid-back people, contented housewives, 'it's not much but it's honest work'. Eg. The Dude.

(High neuroticism)(low competitiveness)- chronic anhedonics, complainers & worrywarts. Eg. Every Woody Allen character.

(Low neuroticism)(high competitiveness)- Typical 'winners' who compete until satisfied & then relax. Eg. Chad Thundercock.

(Hugh neuroticism)(high competitiveness)- People for whom every setback is a challenge & no victory is ever sufficient. Eg. Every conqueror, usurper, visionary and notably 'driven' person.

As a low/low, I kind of feel bad for highly ambitious people. Only a few of them actually get to be legends, most burn out or get crushed (being hypercompetitive doesn't neccessarily make you hypercompetent) and being highly neurotic doesn't sound like much fun even for the billionaires. But I can definitely appreciate the benefits of their existence, preferably far away from me.

Hmm. I don't know. I'm not a billionaire and haven't read any of their biographies, so I feel like I could look into whether your model is right or not...

But my first intuition is that there's a way to do the thing without it sucking? Something where you have an enlightened Buddhist growth mindset sort of shape to your analysis of your failings, and all improvement with respect to your goals is euphoric to you. Then you shape your goals such that you are a maximizer rather than a satisficer, or such that you are a satisficer of things you have determined to be great works.

This is the kind of mindset I try to cultivate. But I'm a loser in terms of current attainment of status, money, or great works, so I can't guarantee that there's an actual path there that works for achieving 'greatness'.

More generally, I'm just skeptical that your proposed architecture- high neuroticism, high competitiveness, is the only architecture that leads to greatness... or perhaps that it has to feel bad. I could be convinced that it's the only one that works for humans if all the billionaires pattern match to it... but there should be other architectures that work in principle.

As a high/high on your quadrant (competence would be a different issue however) - it’s weird to think that other people don’t have these sorts of worries and drives gnawing at them 24/7. To me, it’s just the way life is. So it’s always good to be reminded that there are people who experience the world in such a fundamentally different way.