Yes, yes, everyone's posting this...but if you haven't read it yet, add my recommendation to all the others:
https://davekarpf.substack.com/p/paul-graham-and-the-cult-of-the-founder
Yes, yes, everyone's posting this...but if you haven't read it yet, add my recommendation to all the others:
https://davekarpf.substack.com/p/paul-graham-and-the-cult-of-the-founder
@slightlyoff What else could I take from it?
Article praises Aaron Swartz, the founder of Reddit, one of YCombinator's success stories. It also praises Apple's Woz, and many of us wouldn't even know who he is without Jessica Livingston's “Founders at Work”.
If Altman is taken as a template, that smells like a quantitative statement that deserves evidence.
He mentions that the success of investors comes from being privileged to have money and access (no shit, but also, it needs nuance).
1/2
@slightlyoff He mentions that it's bad founders are elevated over “the rest of us”. But it makes no real attempt to explain why, and I find nothing wrong in praising and elevating entrepreneurship. It certainly takes financial and reputational risk to start a company, and the culture needs to encourage people to do it despite that.
So what else could I take away from it, apart from it being the opinions of a dude who hates the rich and successful?
2/2
@alexelcu I think Dan Davies taps (in a better way) into precisely where “founder mode” holds up and breaks down, and I also think he rightly identifies Graham’s essay as a maybe tacit, maybe unconscious criticism of the last handful of years of Sand Hill Road culture:
https://backofmind.substack.com/p/i-am-a-mode-you-are-a-syndrome