When I hear Elon Musk, I hear a charlatan. When I look at Elon Musk without emotion, I see a complicated trillionaire who resists easy dismissal.
In my social circle, Musk is often dismissed as a grifter.
My fellow underearners love to dismiss successful people as grifters. We love to say, “My own life is a failure, but at least I see through the bullshit.”
My social circle loves to dismiss AI. It’s fraudulent. It’s going bankrupt. It’s all hype. I’ve drunk the Kool Aid.
Most people I know have a negative frame on life. We’re heading for catastrophe. I’m the most optimistic person I know well. I think AI is great and America has a great future and Elon Musk does some great things (though it would not shock me if his story ended in failure and disgrace).
I think we are all wired to dismiss people. We’re wired to say no to everything unless we have a compelling reason to say yes so we can concentrate on those rare persons who add value to our lives.
Elon Musk makes a stupid post on X and I feel embarrassed saying anything positive about the man. Elon Musk gives a bad interview. He repeats slogans. He laughs at his own memes. Asked about history or politics, he produces the takes of a man who read three Reddit threads on the subject. Critics conclude from this that he is a fraud who lucked into his companies or stole credit from his engineers. The conclusion follows from a false premise almost no one examines: that what a man knows shows up in what he says.
Stephen P. Turner (b. 1951) spent a career attacking that premise from the other side. In The Social Theory of Practices and Understanding the Tacit, he argues that the knowledge that makes skilled performance possible never exists as propositions in the first place. It exists as trained capacities built up in an individual nervous system through feedback, one correction at a time. There is no shared mental object called “the practice” that gets copied from head to head. There are only individuals, each of whom assembles his own version of a skill through his own history of trial, error, and adjustment. Two engineers in the same building running the same procedures hold different tacit inventories, because each one learned through a different sequence of mistakes.
Apply that to Musk and the puzzle dissolves.
Start with where his knowledge came from. Musk did not learn rockets from books, though he read them. He learned by sitting in design reviews several days a week for over twenty years, asking questions, getting answers, watching which answers preceded failures and which preceded launches. Each review was a feedback cycle. An engineer tells him a valve needs six months of qualification testing. Musk pushes. Sometimes the pushed schedule holds and sometimes the rocket blows up, and either way his discriminations get a correction. Run that loop ten thousand times and you produce a man who can smell a padded estimate the way a horse trainer reads a fetlock. The trainer cannot tell you what he sees. He sees it.
Turner gives us the right description of this. The knowledge is real, causal, and individual. It sits in Musk’s trained responses, not in any statement he could make. When he walks a Tesla production line and stops at one station out of two hundred, the stopping is the knowledge. Ask him why he stopped and he produces a sentence after the fact. The sentence is a label pasted on a discrimination that ran without words.
This explains the strange status of Musk’s famous five-step algorithm: question every requirement, delete the part, simplify, accelerate, automate last. Engineers inside SpaceX treat it as scripture. Outsiders who read it find banalities. Both reactions make sense in Turner’s terms. Explication transforms tacit knowledge into a new object, a verbal token, and the token does not carry the capacity. A SpaceX engineer who hears “delete the part” after three years of watching Musk delete parts attaches the slogan to a trained sense of which parts can go. An outsider who reads the same words attaches them to nothing. The words are a mnemonic for people who already hold the skill. They transmit nothing to people who lack it. This is why every founder who recites Musk’s principles fails to become Musk. They copied the explication and missed the inventory, because the inventory cannot be copied. It can only be rebuilt, one feedback cycle at a time, in a new nervous system.
The same logic explains his hiring and firing. Musk interviews engineers by asking them to walk through problems they solved, then drills into details. He is not testing their propositional knowledge. He is sampling their tacit inventories, checking whether the discriminations are there, because a man who solved the problem can answer the third follow-up question and a man who watched someone else solve it cannot. The brutal firings serve the same function from the other side. An organization built on tacit competence has no paper credential that certifies the skill, so the only test is performance, and the only enforcement is removal. Turner’s picture of knowledge as individual and local predicts an organization that looks like SpaceX: thin on process documents, thick on apprenticeship, ruthless about demonstrated capacity.
Turner also explains the part of the puzzle that embarrasses Musk’s defenders: why he sounds like a teenager when he leaves his domain. Tacit knowledge does not travel. The trained discriminations that work on rocket engines work on rocket engines. They confer nothing about Roman history, epidemiology, or the politics of Britain. A man whose entire cognitive strength consists of domain-built tacit inventories has no general verbal facility to fall back on, because he never built one. He never needed one. So when a podcast host asks Musk about civilizational decline, he reaches for whatever propositions float nearest, and the nearest propositions on his timeline are memes. The shallowness of his talk and the depth of his work come from the same source. He invested his learning hours in feedback loops with hardware, and the return on those hours sits where he spent them and nowhere else.
This also tells you why interviews with Musk fail as a genre. The interviewer comes to extract the knowledge in portable form. Tell us your principles. Tell us how you think. Musk obliges with first principles talk, and the interviewer leaves with a bag of tokens, and viewers who study the tokens learn nothing operational. The knowledge stayed in the building. Walter Isaacson got closer than the interviewers because he watched Musk work for two years, and watching is the channel through which tacit knowledge moves, when it moves at all. Even then, Isaacson acquired the spectator’s version, the way a man who watches surgery for two years learns what surgery looks like and still cannot cut.
The frame makes a prediction about succession, and the prediction looks right so far. If SpaceX ran on explicit knowledge, Musk could write the manual and retire. It runs on his inventory plus the inventories of the people trained in proximity to him, which means the company’s continuity problem is an apprenticeship problem. Gwynne Shotwell (b. 1963) functions as she does after more than two decades of shared feedback cycles, and Tom Mueller built the engine knowledge in parallel through his own decades of test stands. The people who can extend the capability are the people who built their inventories inside the loop. The company can hire a thousand credentialed engineers, and it does, and each one starts with an empty inventory and fills it the slow way. There is no shortcut, because there is no object to transfer. Turner’s denial of collective tacit objects sounds like academic hairsplitting until you watch a company try to scale a founder’s judgment and discover that the judgment does not scale. It replicates only through contact.
One more payoff. The frame sorts Musk’s evaluators into two errors. The critics score his talk, find it weak, and conclude the man is weak. They assume the verbal inventory samples the whole. The fans make the mirror mistake. They score his talk, find it oracular, and conclude that the memes carry the genius, so they study his tweets the way Confucians studied the Analects. Both camps treat his words as the site of his knowledge. Turner says the site is elsewhere. It is in the 2 a.m. factory walk, the deleted part, the impossible deadline that turns out to miss by only thirty percent because twenty years of feedback taught him how much pad lives in every engineering estimate. The words are exhaust. The engine runs somewhere the microphone cannot reach.
The general lesson cuts against the people most likely to write about Musk. Writers know one kind of knowledge, the kind that lives in sentences, and they grade everyone by it because it is the kind they can see. Turner’s work stands as a long warning that the graders are sampling the wrong inventory. Musk is the largest case in public life of a man whose talk and whose competence have almost nothing to do with each other. Judge the talk and you miss the man. Watch the hands.
The Grader’s Portfolio: Elon Musk Through Bourdieu’s Scholastic Fallacy
Watch any long interview with Elon Musk and you watch a genre fail. The interviewer arrives with the standard equipment of his trade: the request for a worldview, the invitation to reflect, the question that begins with “how do you think about.” Musk shifts in his chair, produces a slogan, makes a joke about memes, and the interviewer leaves with footage of a man who seems smaller than his companies. The footage then circulates as evidence. Here is the mind behind SpaceX, and look how little it contains.
Pierre Bourdieu spent his last decade explaining why this scene was rigged before anyone sat down. In Pascalian Meditations, he names the error he considers the deepest in the human sciences: the scholastic fallacy, the scholar’s habit of stuffing his own relation to the world into the heads of the people he studies. The scholar lives in skholè, the leisure that universities institutionalize, a standing exemption from practical urgency. Nothing in his day forces a decision before the data arrive. His job consists of turning the world into discourse about the world, so when he looks at a man acting, he assumes the action executes a theory, then asks the man for the theory, then grades him on it. Bourdieu calls this placing a scholar inside the machine, and he means it as an accusation. The reconstruction is the scholar’s artifact. The actor never held it.
Bourdieu’s alternative runs through The Logic of Practice. Skilled agents operate on practical sense, the feel for the game that a habitus acquires through long immersion in a field. The tennis player does not compute trajectories. He moves to where the ball will be, and the moving is the intelligence. Ask him to state his theory of return position and he produces banalities, because the question translates his competence into a register where it never lived. The translation loses everything and the questioner then attributes the loss to the player.
Now run Musk through this. His habitus formed across twenty-five years inside two fields, manufacturing and aerospace, fields whose stakes are physical and whose feedback is brutal. The rocket flies or it explodes. The line produces or it stalls. A man shaped by that feedback develops a feel for the game of hardware: which estimate carries pad, which part can go, which engineer believes his own schedule. The feel operates the way the tennis player’s does, in real time, below articulation, as a trained orientation toward the next move. Then a journalist sits him down and asks for his philosophy, and the question performs the exact operation Bourdieu warned against. It demands that practice present itself as theory. Musk has no theory to present, because his competence was never stored in that format, so he reaches for whatever discourse lies nearest, and what lies nearest is the meme pool of his own timeline. The interviewer mistakes the reach for the mind.
So far this overlaps with what a theory of tacit knowledge might say. Bourdieu adds the part no theory of knowledge contains: the class interest behind the grading.
Verbal facility, in Bourdieu’s scheme, is capital. Linguistic capital, a subspecies of cultural capital, convertible into degrees, bylines, tenure, panel seats, and deference. The people who evaluate public figures for a living, journalists, professors, critics, essayists, hold their entire fortunes in this one asset. Their position depends on a favorable exchange rate, on the social agreement that fluent talk indexes intelligence and that intelligence legitimates standing. Every instrument they use to measure other people, the interview, the profile, the review, the seminar question, was built by their class and measures their asset. This is not a conspiracy. It is what Bourdieu means by a field: a market whose incumbents defend the value of the capital they hold, mostly without knowing they are doing it, because the defense feels like standards.
Musk threatens the exchange rate. Here stands a man with the largest fortune on earth, command of the most advanced hardware programs in private hands, and the verbal presence of a bright fourteen-year-old. If he counts as intelligent, then verbal facility and intelligence come apart, and the asset every intellectual holds loses its backing. The cheapest defense is to mark him down. Call him a fraud, a lucky inheritor, a front man for his engineers. Each of these verdicts protects the grader’s portfolio, and each one arrives dressed as judgment, which is how symbolic power works. Bourdieu’s point cuts past hypocrisy. The intellectual who scores Musk low is sincere. His sincerity is the product of a habitus that cannot perceive competence without a verbal face, because every competence he has ever been rewarded for had one.
The frame then explains something the standard accounts of Musk’s media war miss. Musk did not merely complain about coverage. He bought the instrument. The Twitter purchase, read through Bourdieu, is a move in a struggle between fields over conversion rates. Journalism’s power rested on its monopoly position in consecration, the capacity to decide who counts as serious, and that capacity ran through a platform journalists had colonized. Musk converted economic capital into ownership of the consecration machine, then changed its rules, demoted the verified class, and elevated his own register, the meme, to the house style. Intellectuals experienced this as vandalism. In field terms it was a devaluation. He used money to attack the currency his graders are paid in, and their fury since has the unmistakable pitch of a holding class watching its asset slide.
Bourdieu would not let Musk off, though, and the frame earns its keep by cutting him too. The scholastic fallacy has a mirror. The practical actor who projects his own relation to the world onto every domain commits the same error from the other side, and Musk does this on schedule. He treats government as a badly run factory, social trust as a software problem, journalism as content with bad engagement metrics. His DOGE period read every institution through the deletion heuristic that works on rocket parts, and the results showed what happens when one field’s practical sense gets exported to a field with different stakes. Bourdieu’s framework predicts this failure as firmly as it predicts the intellectuals’ failure to read Musk. Each habitus universalizes itself. The engineer inside the machine of state is as misplaced as the scholar inside the machine of practice.
There is a last twist. Musk craves the very capital his existence devalues. He performs erudition, drops Latin, cites history badly, polls his followers on civilizational questions, and visibly wants standing as a thinker, not only as a builder. Bourdieu would find this familiar. Dominant agents in one field routinely seek consecration in the field that ranks above it in symbolic prestige, the way nineteenth-century industrialists bought paintings. The hunger confirms the hierarchy. Musk’s memes are bids for intellectual standing made by a man without the capital to bid properly, on an exchange he had to buy because the existing one refused his currency. The intellectuals laugh at the bids, and the laughter is the one judgment of theirs the frame ratifies, though for a reason they might not enjoy: in this single market, the one they own, their pricing is sound.
What the frame predicts going forward is stasis. The misjudgment of Musk cannot correct itself through better interviews or fairer profiles, because the error sits in the instruments, and the instruments sit in the interest of the class that runs them. Perceiving practical competence as intelligence would cost the intellectual class the premium on its own asset, and no class prices its asset down voluntarily. Musk will keep sounding empty to the people whose job is listening, and the rockets will keep landing, and each side will keep reading the other’s scoreboard as broken. Bourdieu’s bleak gift is to show that both scoreboards work. They just price different capitals, held by classes with no reason to honor each other’s currency.
The Wrong Test: Elon Musk Through the Psychometric Tilt Research
In 1971, Julian Stanley (1918-2005) began hunting for mathematically gifted children at Johns Hopkins. His method was blunt: give twelve-year-olds the SAT, a test built for seventeen-year-olds, and see who scores like a college freshman. The Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth grew into five cohorts and more than five thousand participants, tracked across their whole adult lives. David Lubinski and Camilla Benbow now run it at Vanderbilt, and it stands as the longest, deepest record we have of what becomes of exceptional minds. Fifty years of follow-up. Careers, patents, publications, income, tenure. No other frame on Musk can produce a longitudinal table.
The finding that bears on Musk concerns the shape of ability, not its height. Take a child in the top one percent and look at the gap between his math score and his verbal score at age thirteen. That gap, the tilt, predicts the domain of his adult work decades later. A 2007 paper by Gregory Park, Lubinski, and Benbow followed participants for twenty-five years and found the split clean at the extremes. The math-tilted earned the patents, the STEM doctorates, the engineering careers, the startups. The verbal-tilted wrote the books, won the humanities posts, produced the essays and the criticism. Both groups were brilliant by any normal standard. They were brilliant in different directions, and the direction set at thirteen held for life.
Later work added a third axis the SAT never measured. Jonathan Wai, Lubinski, and Benbow showed that spatial ability, the capacity to rotate and assemble structures in the head, predicts engineering and invention beyond what math and verbal scores explain. They call it the neglected dimension, because schools do not test it, admissions offices do not see it, and the culture has no prestige category for it. A child can sit at the 99.9th percentile in spatial reasoning and pass through the entire education system unmarked, since every instrument the system uses is a verbal instrument. The spatially gifted become machinists, surgeons, architects, and chief engineers, and they remain invisible to the class that writes about talent, because the class that writes about talent cannot measure what they have.
Now place Musk against this grid. We have no SAT score for him at thirteen, so the placement is behavioral, and the caution stands. But the signature is hard to miss. He taught himself to code at twelve and sold a game. He took degrees in physics and economics, then built his career on design review, the work of holding a machine in the head and finding the part that should not exist. Engineers who sit in those reviews describe a man who reasons through structures, loads, and costs in real time, at a level that keeps specialists honest. Then watch him in a seminar setting and the same man fumbles a question about history that any graduate student might handle. The profile reads as an extreme math-spatial tilt: a mind near the ceiling on two axes and ordinary on the third, the axis that happens to be the only one an interview can see.
That is the frame’s first payoff. An interview is a verbal test. So is a profile, a panel, a podcast, an essay. The entire apparatus through which public intelligence gets assessed consists of instruments built along one axis, administered by people selected on that axis. Run a spatially tilted mind through a verbal instrument and the instrument returns a low score, and the score is accurate about the axis and worthless about the mind. The SMPY data say these axes come apart at the extremes, and come apart hard. The further out you go, the rarer the balanced profile becomes. Expecting the man who designs the rocket to also charm the seminar misreads the distribution. At that altitude, the population mostly splits.
The second payoff concerns the graders. Who evaluates public figures? Journalists, critics, professors, essayists, the verbally eminent. The SMPY frame describes them as the other tail of the same distribution, the verbal-tilted who converted their axis into careers, exactly as the data predicted they might. Each tail then does what every human does: it tests strangers with its strong suit. The writer probes a subject with questions and reads the answers as the mind. The engineer probes a subject with problems and reads the solutions as the mind. Each test is fair on its own axis and blind on the other, so each population sits in a lifetime of evidence that the other population is overrated. The writer meets engineers who cannot write a paragraph and concludes they are narrow. The engineer meets writers who cannot read a balance sheet and concludes they are decorative. Both inferences feel empirical. Both sample one axis and bill it as the whole.
This makes the misjudgment of Musk a structural product, not a failure of fairness. The people assigned by our division of labor to assess him are drawn from the population least equipped to register his strengths and most equipped to register his weaknesses. Their verdict that he is unimpressive is true along the axis they measure. The error sits in the unstated premise that their axis is the measure, and the premise is invisible to them because their own success confirms it daily.
The frame then turns on Musk. His running contempt for the humanities, the cracks about college as four years of fun, the suggestion that journalists produce nothing, the engineer’s smirk at any field without equations: this is the identical error with the sign flipped. The SMPY verbal-tilt sample includes people of his own rarity who built their eminence in language, and his instruments cannot see them any better than theirs can see him. When he wades into history or political theory and performs at meme level, he demonstrates on himself the exact point his critics miss about him, that competence is axis-bound. He just draws the wrong conclusion, that the other axis does not exist.
SMPY found that tilt predicts not just careers but values and tastes. The math-tilted score high on theoretical values and prefer working with things; the verbal-tilted score high on aesthetic values and prefer working with people and symbols. The tilt sorts whole lives, friendships, politics, reading habits. By adulthood the two tails inhabit separate worlds with separate scoreboards, and each world’s scoreboard hangs where its members can see it. Musk and his graders are not having a disagreement. They are reporting from different instruments, calibrated in childhood, stable for fifty years in the data, with almost no one positioned to read both.
The frames has limits. Tilt findings come from within the top one percent, where everyone has high absolute ability on every axis, and Musk’s actual scores are unknown. The frame cannot prove anything about one man. What it offers is a base rate and a prediction. The base rate says minds at the extreme usually point one way. The prediction says a verbal class will keep scoring a spatial man as empty, and a spatial man will keep scoring a verbal class as fake, and both will keep mistaking their instrument for the world. On fifty years of evidence, that is how the tails behave. Musk and his critics are running the experiment again, with cameras.
