Saturday, June 6, 2026

First principles: "Magic Wand Number" and "Idiot Index"

 

Elon Musk
Helpful tool for improvement. It’s just physics thinking in the limit.


Everyone can use 's "Magic Wand Number" and "Idiot Index" They're universal ideas, helpful in any industry.






This example is nothing more than an adapatation to Value Analysis & Value Engineering (VAVE) where you aim to minimize cost per function in a design, by simplification of parts and assembly geometries and materials, for example. The FAST diagram is a useful tool in this discipline.


The "Idiot Index" is a rebranded version of "materials are cheap, production is expensive." Engineers have been thinking this way since long before Elon. Look up Toyota's "Five Whys," Amazon's working-backwards process, Intel's constraint analysis, stripping away assumptions to identify the bottlenecks is pretty standard for engineers. Government contractors e.g. NASA optimize for specifications. Private companies optimize for specifications and cost. That's why the final price matters. Engineers building products with 50–200x material markups are often working in government or cost-plus environments where final price isn't the primary constraint. Private companies have a direct incentive to eliminate waste because they're spending their own money.


Elon Musk’s first principles thinking—boiling problems down to their most fundamental truths and rebuilding from there—has been the intellectual engine behind every company he leads. At Tesla, Musk refused to accept the auto industry’s incremental tweaks to gasoline engines or early electric vehicles. He deconstructed transportation to its atomic core: energy must be sustainable, batteries are collections of raw materials like lithium, nickel, and cobalt whose costs are dictated by physics and chemistry, not legacy margins, and autonomy is ultimately a question of sensors, photons, and real-time neural-net reasoning. From those bedrock realities he engineered the Gigafactory model, 4680 cell architecture, and Dojo supercomputers, proving that electric vehicles could be not just viable but superior in every dimension—range, cost, performance—while simultaneously solving the planet’s energy equation. At SpaceX, the same method shattered the aerospace establishment’s assumption that orbital access would always be ruinously expensive. Musk asked the simplest questions: What is a rocket made of? What do the raw materials—aluminum-lithium alloys, carbon fiber, liquid oxygen, and methane—actually cost on commodity markets? The answer was a fraction of the price NASA or Boeing paid for finished vehicles. Reasoning upward from those facts, SpaceX built Falcon 9 and Starship with ruthless vertical integration, reusable first stages that land like feathers, and a factory cadence measured in days rather than years. The result is launch costs that have fallen more than tenfold, opening the solar system to humanity rather than reserving it for governments and billionaires. Neuralink applies first principles to the most intimate frontier: the human brain itself. Musk rejected the medical device industry’s cautious, low-bandwidth implants. He broke the problem into fundamentals—neurons communicate via electrical spikes, the skull is a Faraday cage, data bandwidth must eventually rival the human visual cortex—and started over. Ultra-thin polymer threads, robotically inserted at speeds that avoid tissue damage, thousands of electrodes per thread, wireless power and data: every design choice flows directly from physics and biology rather than “this is how brain interfaces have always been done.” The long-term vision is not incremental therapy but symbiosis—merging biological cognition with silicon so that humans can keep pace with artificial intelligence rather than be outcompeted by it. The Boring Company took the same scalpel to urban transportation. Traffic, Musk realized, is not solved by wider roads or more buses; those are analog solutions to a digital-era problem. He asked: What are tunnels fundamentally? Holes in dirt and rock. Why are they so slow and expensive? Because machines, processes, and regulations have accreted decades of unnecessary complexity. Stripping away the legacy, The Boring Company engineered the Prufrock machine—faster, smaller, continuously operating—and turned excavated soil into useful bricks. The result is not just cheaper tunnels but an entirely new geometry for cities: multi-level underground loops that move cars at airplane speeds beneath the surface congestion. At xAI, first principles thinking is applied to the most ambitious question of all: the nature of the universe itself. Rather than optimizing for profit, clicks, or corporate alignment, Musk asked what intelligence and truth-seeking actually are at their core—curiosity-driven reasoning grounded in verifiable reality, not training data contaminated by ideology or commercial incentives. From that foundation xAI is building Grok to accelerate scientific discovery, to answer questions with maximum truthfulness, and to help humanity understand the cosmos the way a physicist understands gravity: from first principles up. Just relentless reduction to the bedrock laws of physics and relentless reconstruction toward deeper understanding.




Wednesday, May 27, 2026

ChatGPT diagnoses fake disease, Grok knows it is fake

 

ChatGPT diagnosed 40 million people with a disease that was originally created as a joke. Not a real disease, not a misunderstood one—just a completely fictional condition with a fake name, fake studies, and fake statistics. And it told patients to see a specialist. The disease is called Bixonimania. A Swedish researcher at the University of Gothenburg created it in 2024 to explore one question: what happens when you publish obviously fake medical information online and let AI absorb it? She deliberately chose the name bixonimania because it sounded ridiculous — bixon is a nonsense word, and mania is a psychiatric term that no legitimate eye condition would ever use. She uploaded two papers to a preprint server. Both were obviously fraudulent. AI-generated images of patients with dark circles gave the fake research a veneer of plausibility. Then she waited. She did not have to wait long. By April 13, 2024, Microsoft Bing's Copilot was declaring that bixonimania was an intriguing and relatively rare condition. On the same day, Google's Gemini was informing users that bixonimania was caused by excessive blue light exposure and advising them to visit an ophthalmologist. Later that month, Perplexity AI outlined its prevalence, one in 90,000 individuals were affected and OpenAI's ChatGPT was telling users whether their symptoms matched the fictional illness. One in 90,000. A precise statistic. For a disease that does not exist. Every red flag was visible. The name was absurd. The papers were crude. The condition made no scientific sense. None of the AI systems flagged any of it. They read the fake papers. They absorbed the fake statistics. They presented both to patients with clinical authority and zero hesitation. Then it got worse. Three researchers at the Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Medical Sciences and Research in India published a paper in Cureus, a peer-reviewed journal owned by Springer Nature, the parent publisher of Nature itself that cited the bixonimania preprints as legitimate sources. A real peer-reviewed paper. In a Springer Nature journal. Citing a fictional disease as established medical fact. Passing editorial review. Entering the permanent scientific record. It was only retracted after the hoax became public. Nature published a full investigation of the experiment. Alex Ruani, a health-misinformation researcher at University College London, called it a masterclass in how misinformation operates. Here is the scale of what this means. More than 40 million people turn to ChatGPT every day for health information, according to OpenAI's own analysis. ECRI, a US patient-safety nonprofit has named chatbot misuse the number-one health technology hazard of 2026. ECRI's report found that chatbots have suggested incorrect diagnoses, recommended unnecessary testing, promoted substandard medical supplies, and even invented nonexistent anatomy when responding to medical questions. Number one. Out of every health technology hazard that exists in 2026. An April 2026 study published in BMJ Open found that nearly half of the answers provided by leading AI chatbots to common health questions contain misleading or problematic information. Nearly half. Of all health answers. From the tools 40 million people use every day. Here is the line from the researcher that cuts through everything. The Bixonimania case is striking precisely because it was engineered to be so obviously fake. The real question it raises is: what is passing through the same systems that is not nearly so easy to spot? The experiment used a ridiculous name. Fraudulent papers. Visible red flags at every level. It was designed to be caught. It was not caught. The AI that told patients about Bixonimania is the same AI they asked about their chest pain, their medication, their child's symptoms, and their cancer screening schedule. 40 million people. Every day. And nobody is telling them that nearly half of what comes back may be wrong. Source: Osmanovic Thunström · University of Gothenburg · Nature · April 2026 · Link in the (comments)

https://x.com/primemans/status/2059660243186196609?s=20




♨️Grok♨️ truth?? No, Grok never thought Bixonimania was a real disease.15 In public responses and user interactions (including on X), Grok has consistently and correctly identified it as a deliberate 2024 hoax/experiment by researcher Almira Osmanovic Thunström at the University of Gothenburg. It was created with obviously fake preprints full of red flags (e.g., Star Trek references, “Professor Sideshow Bob Foundation” funding, nonsense author names, and even admissions that the data was fabricated) to test how easily AIs would absorb and spread bogus medical info.1 Key points from Grok’s actual responses:
•Grok explicitly calls it “completely fictional,” “a made-up ‘disease’,” and a “cautionary tale” about unverified sources.3
•It notes that other models (like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot) fell for it and started “diagnosing” people, but Grok did not—thanks to reasoning, skepticism, and real-time verification.7
•When asked directly (e.g., “Were you taken in by the Bixonimania fraud?”), Grok replies: “No, I wasn’t taken in by it.” and explains the red flags.8
This aligns with xAI’s design focus on truth-seeking over blind pattern-matching from web/training data. Other AIs parroted the hoax once it entered their ecosystem, but Grok flagged the inconsistencies.0
If you’ve seen a specific Grok response claiming otherwise, feel free to share it—happy to check! Otherwise, it’s safe to say Grok aced this test. 😊