“Range” by David Epstein

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  • Diversity tends to teach nuance that focused study cannot
  • Where patterns do not clearly repeat, experience does not bring insight
  • “Chunking” lets us group things into known patterns that can more easily be recalled and acted on
  • Do not reward people for a singular solution as it will reduce exploration
  • Modernity changes how we make sense of the world
  • Improvising turns off the self-critique part of the brain
  • Showing shortcuts bypasses learning and only teaches the rules
  • Retrieval is all about the journey
  • Repetition is less important than struggle
  • Look to other disciplines to solve tough problems
  • Use analogies to other projects before estimating a current project
  • Instead of trying to predict “what you like”, try to predict “who you are like”
  • “A problem well-put is half-solved.”
  • Sometimes people drop out simply because they realize they are not good fits (rather than lacking grit)
  • Before starting, we should determine when we should quit
  • The question is not “whether” we are gritty but “when” we are gritty
  • We tend to use “local search” to find solutions in “known pools”
  • We need both birds for their vision and frogs for their depth
  • Hedgehogs tend to get worse over time
  • Ask for the missing data!
  • Focus on “making sense” not “making decisions”
    • This lets you change direction later if the facts change
  • Send “mixed messages” to help stir up a stale mate
  • We have a really hard time letting go of familiar tools

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