Forwarded from من الشبكة - From the Web
It’s long been said that a jack of all trades is a master of none. But the myth of the superiority of specialists is apparently based on limited data, and there’s plenty of evidence, now collected in a new book, to suggest that range is the true engine of innovation and creativity in the game of life.
That’s when Epstein learned that not all professional athletes succeed thanks to their exceptional early focus. Some—like tennis champion Roger Federer—seem to have blossomed in one area despite having played many different sports in youth. Meanwhile, research on professional soccer players in Germany revealed that the best players were those who didn’t take the sport seriously until their twenties.
Most compelling of all is the evidence that having a capacity for abstraction and the ability to transfer concepts is the key to success in our “wicked” world. While it’s true that some chess grandmasters and world-class athletes start early and drill hard, this repetition is only effective in golf or games with strict rules and easily quantifiable results, Epstein says. Those are “kind” worlds with limited possibilities.
Epstein argues that people who don’t have a strict plan dictating what they will be and a narrow focus on a single interest end up making amazing contributions to the culture because they can transfer knowledge from one field to another. They understand concepts and see how these might apply to other areas, whereas the specialists are so steeped in one set of facts that they may miss the forest for the trees. If you only have one tool, you’ll use it in every situation—but you can’t use a hammer to screw things and you can’t use a saw to hammer a nail, so the wise human accumulates a bunch of tools, and getting this varied toolkit takes time.
Instead, Epstein promotes concepts. He urges individuals—and parents especially—to abandon the desire for instant gratification and easy answers as early performance on tests isn’t an indicator of professional success. He emphasizes traits over particular skills—be curious, flexible, open-minded, adventurous, experimental, and playful. Try and fail and try again. Explore. Read outside your field. Supply your mind with lots of ideas so that you can make the connections that specialists miss, helping you thrive.
https://qz.com/1638869/david-epsteins-range-argues-for-generalizing-vs-specializing/
That’s when Epstein learned that not all professional athletes succeed thanks to their exceptional early focus. Some—like tennis champion Roger Federer—seem to have blossomed in one area despite having played many different sports in youth. Meanwhile, research on professional soccer players in Germany revealed that the best players were those who didn’t take the sport seriously until their twenties.
Most compelling of all is the evidence that having a capacity for abstraction and the ability to transfer concepts is the key to success in our “wicked” world. While it’s true that some chess grandmasters and world-class athletes start early and drill hard, this repetition is only effective in golf or games with strict rules and easily quantifiable results, Epstein says. Those are “kind” worlds with limited possibilities.
Epstein argues that people who don’t have a strict plan dictating what they will be and a narrow focus on a single interest end up making amazing contributions to the culture because they can transfer knowledge from one field to another. They understand concepts and see how these might apply to other areas, whereas the specialists are so steeped in one set of facts that they may miss the forest for the trees. If you only have one tool, you’ll use it in every situation—but you can’t use a hammer to screw things and you can’t use a saw to hammer a nail, so the wise human accumulates a bunch of tools, and getting this varied toolkit takes time.
Instead, Epstein promotes concepts. He urges individuals—and parents especially—to abandon the desire for instant gratification and easy answers as early performance on tests isn’t an indicator of professional success. He emphasizes traits over particular skills—be curious, flexible, open-minded, adventurous, experimental, and playful. Try and fail and try again. Explore. Read outside your field. Supply your mind with lots of ideas so that you can make the connections that specialists miss, helping you thrive.
https://qz.com/1638869/david-epsteins-range-argues-for-generalizing-vs-specializing/
Quartz
To thrive in a "wicked" world, you need range
The hyper-specialized are prepared to solve problems in "kind" environments. Life is not kind, and variation is required.
Forwarded from Shower Thoughts 🚿
The entirety of human civilization is currently racing against time and resources to populate another planet so we are not trapped forever on earth. In a way we humans are a virus infecting the planet, eating away resources and attempting to find another host.
Shower Thoughts 🚿
The entirety of human civilization is currently racing against time and resources to populate another planet so we are not trapped forever on earth. In a way we humans are a virus infecting the planet, eating away resources and attempting to find another host.
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slight tangent but thought you folx might like (good music = solarpunk!) https://radiohead.bandcamp.com/
❤1
Forwarded from Today I Learned - Ad Free
TIL three poachers broke into a reserve to hunt for rhinos and ended up being eaten by a pack of lions.
https://nyti.ms/2wNi4En
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 03:04AM by JustSomeGuy_Idk
via reddit http://bit.ly/2XI6x56
https://nyti.ms/2wNi4En
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 03:04AM by JustSomeGuy_Idk
via reddit http://bit.ly/2XI6x56
NY Times
Lions Eat Men Suspected of Poaching Rhinos. Some Saw ‘Karma.’
Rangers discovered the remains along with a rifle fitted with a silencer, an ax and wire cutters on a private game reserve in South Africa.
Forwarded from Today I Learned - Ad Free
TIL a Stonehenge like structure has been found under Lake Michigan, which includes a boulder with a prehistoric Mastodon carving on it
http://bit.ly/2Zf58mM
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 05:05AM by nodrogx
via reddit http://bit.ly/2F49DJx
http://bit.ly/2Zf58mM
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 05:05AM by nodrogx
via reddit http://bit.ly/2F49DJx
ZME Science
Stonehenge-like Structure Found Under Lake Michigan
While scanning underneath the waters of Lake Michigan for shipwrecks, archeologists found something a lot more interesting than they bargained for.
Forwarded from Today I Learned - Ad Free
TIL 700,000 year old stone tools were found in the Philippines despite the fact that known humans didn't arrive until 600,000 years later. Researches aren't sure how humans got there or what early hominid could have even made them
http://bit.ly/2BK5V59
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 09:41AM by Primo2000
via reddit http://bit.ly/2Wuh0jj
http://bit.ly/2BK5V59
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 09:41AM by Primo2000
via reddit http://bit.ly/2Wuh0jj
Forwarded from Today I Learned - Ad Free
TIL in the past 42 years over 51 million trees have been planted in Kenya by the Green Belt Movement founded by Nobel Peace Prize Winner Wangari Maathai.
http://bit.ly/oUjA5d
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 01:51PM by pinkdaisyy
via reddit http://bit.ly/2RbFRHj
http://bit.ly/oUjA5d
Submitted June 12, 2019 at 01:51PM by pinkdaisyy
via reddit http://bit.ly/2RbFRHj
www.greenbeltmovement.org
The Green Belt Movement