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Why Marc Andreessen’s ‘zero introspection’ approach will get you nowhere

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Introspection? Marc Andreessen’s never heard of it. 

Speaking on David Senra’s podcast, the cofounder of Andreessen Horowitz, one of the largest venture capital firms, said he has “zero” levels of introspection: “As little as possible. Move forward. Go,” he added. 

“I find that people who dwell on the past get stuck in the past,” he said in the interview. “It’s a problem at work and it’s a problem at home.”

The noted AI accelerationist went on to state that introspection is a “manufacture” of the early 1900s. Sigmund Freud and his peers are held responsible, according to Andreessen, for introducing concepts such as second guessing, guilt and self-criticism.

“Great men of history didn’t sit around doing this stuff at any prior point,” he said. “It’s all a new construct.”

While Senra is seemingly impressed by Andreessen’s “zero-introspection mindset”—pointing to Walmart’s Sam Walton as another example of this build-without-ever-looking-back mentality—the clip went viral on X for all the wrong reasons. 

“Marc Andreessen is a good example of why a lot of traditional societies around the world had a dim view of men of commerce,” one X user wrote. There was also some doubt as to what Andreessen thinks “introspection” even actually means.

“Its really funny if you watch this clip it becomes clear he thinks ‘introspection’ and ‘guilt’ are synonymous,” another wrote

In the interview, Andreessen claimed, “Four hundred years ago, it would never have occurred to anybody to be introspective.” And yet, as many have since called out, that historical argument doesn’t hold up to a quick Google search. 

Aristotle, in 350 B.C., famously said: “Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom.”

Socrates also wrote in Plato’s Apology in 460 B.C.: “The unexamined life is not worth living.”

Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius, from his work titled Meditations in 150 A.D., once mused: “You have power over your mind—not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.” 

“It never resonated with me,” said Andreessen in the interview. 

People who lack self-awareness don’t understand its value

Aside from the historical precedence, introspection, or looking inward, fuels both self-awareness and growth.

Experts say that introspecting and building self-awareness leads to great things for leaders. It gives you a realistic sense of your strengths and weaknesses, helps you pinpoint what causes you doubt (and thus prevents success), and can help hone why you want to achieve your goals in the first place—and knowing yourself well enough to know what you need to do in your own situation to make them happen. Introspection makes you more open to feedback, and generally leads to greater development and growth.

McKinsey research has even shown that taking a moment for self-reflection can help alleviate leadership fatigue—the state of exhaustion caused by high-stakes decision making and stress. 

On top of that, introspection is a simple yet powerful way for leaders to develop important human skills, such as vulnerability, empathy, adaptability, and generosity. These soft skills are what ultimately separate humans from technologies like artificial intelligence

Those who skip these moments of reflection and introspection can find themselves often extrinsically motivated, by clout or riches, with little consideration of collateral damage caused along the way. (Like throwing investment behind a gambling app that targets teens or AI influencer farms, for example.) 

But it can be difficult to convince someone who lacks self-awareness of the value of self-awareness. 

Only about 15% of people are sufficiently self-aware, a study by Harvard Business Publishing Corporate Learning found, with a less than a 30% correlation between people’s actual and self-perceived competence. A leader’s lack of self-awareness, meanwhile, negatively impacts decision making, collaboration, and conflict management, the research found.

The backlash seems to have struck a nerve, despite the venture capitalist’s claims to the contrary. Andreessen unironically outsourced the defense of his position to “my philosophy instructor Claude,” summarizing a “Nietzschean Demolition of Introspection and Feelings.”

Or, as one X user put it: “billionaire overlord marc andreessen is currently crashing out over the woke concept of ‘introspection’.”

The monumental crashout has since continued onto day two. Andreessen doubled down on X, saying, “I regret nothing.”

To that, one X user responded: “Breaking: Man who doesn’t introspect says he regrets nothing.”

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