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I do believe that all healthy human beings do have the same potential for the amount of knowledge they can consume

Nope.

There are a lot of non-intelligent people out there. No matter how hard they try, they're not going to be theoretical physicists. If you think these people have the potential, but they're just not trying hard enough, that's an extremely bizarre view of the reality of their existence.

You're right though that David Karp's $180M payout is, in part, a product of luck and forces beyond his control.

According to probability, Karp probably is better at most things than a random person on HN. But is he better because of his $180M payout? Karp experienced a unique set of circumstances beyond his control (as each of us do) and none of his life experiences prevented him from reaching this payout (extremely lucky).

No doubt, his success and achievements suggest he is smart, hardworking, dedicated, etc. But another person, twice as smart, twice as hardworking, twice as dedicated, is affected daily by a totally different series of external events beyond his control, any one of which might preclude him from realizing the scenario where he gets a $180M payout.

And, some people choose paths in science/engineering/software/anything that preclude the possibility of a $180M payout. The researcher toiling in a lab to push forward the boundaries of human knowledge and achievement is most likely going to earn a modest salary his entire life (modest, at least, relative to Karp's). Is he worse in any way because he didn't create a microblogging platform that existed at the right place at the right time? Of course not.



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