From the free press, this is Honestly, and I'm Barry Weiss.
Love him or hate him, many consider Elon Musk to be a modern-day genius.
He co-founded PayPal, which transformed how people purchase things.
He became the CEO of Tesla, which revolutionized electric vehicles and made it cool to drive an EV.
He founded SpaceX,
which has accomplished only what superpower nation-states have done in the past and is now working to make our species intergalactic.
Maybe in a few years, I'll be doing this podcast on Mars.
To many, these acts and more make Elon Musk a genius,
perhaps the most important genius in the world today.
But it's worth asking, what exactly makes him a genius?
Is it a particular set of qualities?
Or is Elon Musk just particularly adept at playing the role of genius,
or at least what we've come to expect of geniuses?
And is his offensive behavior excused by his genius or the result of it?
And what is it about us as human beings that values genius so much,
even to the point of deifying it?
All of these questions are raised in Helen Lewis's brilliant new book,
The Genius Myth, a curious history of a dangerous idea.
And not just with regard to Elon Musk,
but to so many of the figures that our culture venerates as geniuses,