Skip to main content
DeepCutsArchive
BrowseArtistsDecadesSubmit
Menu
BrowseArtistsDecadesGenresLocationsCategoriesSubmit a ClipContributors

Theme

DeepCutsArchive

Preserving the footage that shaped music history. Rare clips, studio sessions, and moments lost to time.

BrowseArtistsGenresDecadesLocationsSubmit a Clip

© 2026 DeepCutsArchive. All footage remains the property of its original creators.

Privacy PolicyTerms of UseSupport

Developed with love as a personal project by Jamie McDonnell

ui-ux-design.comai-consultancy.company
Why Smart People Feel Like Frauds: The Psychology of Impostor Syndrome and Its Hidden Benefits — DeepCutsArchive
PreviousUse arrow keysNext
0 views
Share this clip

Why Smart People Feel Like Frauds: The Psychology of Impostor Syndrome and Its Hidden Benefits

youtube

Why Smart People Feel Like Frauds: The Psychology of Impostor Syndrome and Its Hidden Benefits Incompetent people tend to see themselves as not just competent, but highly competent. So, at any rate, holds the theory of the “Dunning-Kruger effect,” previously featured here on Open Culture. But does the converse also hold: do highly competent people tend to see themselves as incompetent? That would seem to be an implication of what’s been called “impostor syndrome,” a persistent sense of inadequacy relative to one’s status or position, unsupported by any objective evidence. If you yourself have been afflicted with that condition, it may be a tad hasty to take it as a sign of your own effectiveness, but as the Harvard Business School’s Arthur C. Brooks explains in the clip above, it may nonetheless benefit you to lean into it. “What all strivers I’ve ever met have in common is that, the higher they climb and the more success they have, the more insecure they feel in their own succ

Added 24 Mar 2026



Know someone who'd love this clip?

Help us preserve music history — share it with friends and fellow fans.

Share this clip

Keep Exploring

All ArtistsAll GenresAll DecadesBrowse by Type