> According to rationalists, humans don't work together, so you can't add up their individual intelligence to get more intelligence.
An actual argument would be that intelligence doesn't work like that. Two people with IQ 100 cooperating together does not produce an IQ 200 solution.
There is the "wisdom of crowds". If a random member of a group is more than 50% likely to be correct, the average of the group is more likely to be correct than its members individually. But that has a few assumptions, for example that each member tries to figure out things independently (as opposed to everyone waiting for the highest-status member to express their opinion, and then agreeing with it -- in that case the entire group is only as smart as the highest-status member).
But you cannot leverage this to simply invite 1000 random people in your group and ask them to invent a Theory of Everything; because the assumption that each member is more than 50% likely to be correct does not apply in this case. So that is one of the limits of people working together.
(And this already conveniently ignores many other problems found in real life, such as conflict of interests, etc.)
An actual argument would be that intelligence doesn't work like that. Two people with IQ 100 cooperating together does not produce an IQ 200 solution.
There is the "wisdom of crowds". If a random member of a group is more than 50% likely to be correct, the average of the group is more likely to be correct than its members individually. But that has a few assumptions, for example that each member tries to figure out things independently (as opposed to everyone waiting for the highest-status member to express their opinion, and then agreeing with it -- in that case the entire group is only as smart as the highest-status member).
But you cannot leverage this to simply invite 1000 random people in your group and ask them to invent a Theory of Everything; because the assumption that each member is more than 50% likely to be correct does not apply in this case. So that is one of the limits of people working together.
(And this already conveniently ignores many other problems found in real life, such as conflict of interests, etc.)