Barry

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David   Epstein
“In a wicked world, relying upon experience from a single domain is not only limiting, it can be disastrous.”
David Epstein, Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

“Their findings about who these people are should sound familiar by now: "high tolerance for ambiguity"; "systems thinkers"; "additional technical knowledge from peripheral domains"; "repurposing what is already available"; "adept at using analogous domains for finding inputs to the invention process"; "ability to connect disparate pieces of information in new ways"; "synthesizing information from many different sources"; "they appear to flit among ideas"; "broad range of interests"; "they read more (and more broadly) than other technologists and have a wider range of outside interests"; "need to learn significantly across domains"; "Serial innovators also need to communicate with various individuals with technical expertise outside of their own domain.”
David Epstein, Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

David   Epstein
“breadth of training predicts breadth of transfer. That is, the more contexts in which something is learned, the more the learner creates abstract models, and the less they rely on any particular example. Learners become better at applying their knowledge to a situation they’ve never seen before, which is the essence of creativity.”
David Epstein, Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

David   Epstein
“Like chess masters and firefighters, premodern villagers relied on things being the same tomorrow as they were yesterday. They were extremely well prepared for what they had experienced before, and extremely poorly equipped for everything else. Their very thinking was highly specialized in a manner that the modern world has been telling us is increasingly obsolete. They were perfectly capable of learning from experience, but failed at learning without experience. And that is what a rapidly changing, wicked world demands—conceptual reasoning skills that can connect new ideas and work across contexts. Faced with any problem they had not directly experienced before, the remote villagers were completely lost. That is not an option for us. The more constrained and repetitive a challenge, the more likely it will be automated, while great rewards will accrue to those who can take conceptual knowledge from one problem or domain and apply it in an entirely new one.”
David Epstein, Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

Rick Rubin
“If you know what you want to do and you do it, that’s the work of a craftsman. If you begin with a question and use it to guide an adventure of discovery, that’s the work of the artist.”
Rick Rubin, The Creative Act: A Way of Being

year in books
Louis
459 books | 185 friends

Rachel
1,170 books | 122 friends

Sarah
1,874 books | 89 friends

Jasmine...
863 books | 110 friends

Andrea ...
145 books | 170 friends

Jeffsny...
530 books | 72 friends

Andrei ...
630 books | 170 friends

Stephanie
236 books | 126 friends

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