I've been a "play to your strengths" advocate for a while, although I agree with "whatever you're doing in life, your success is probably constrained by something stupid that you hate."
Big picture, that's the point of specialization and the division of labor. If you focus where you have a comparative advantage, you'll be productive enough pay someone else to that other stuff.
On a smaller scale, it's a lot easier to find the motivation to get around those kind of pain points, and just make yourself do it, when it's very specific and very costly. That's not at all the same as a general focus on improving weaknesses. It's clearing obstacles out of the way in order to unconstrain strengths.
this territory is moderated
Big picture, that's the point of specialization and the division of labor.
I agree provisionally, but my caveat is the same one that I told to our CEO on that flight. It was something like:
Outsourcing your weaknesses makes sense in the abstract as a comparative advantage play; but think of Coase as a counter. Why are there corporations at all, and not exclusively one-off networks of specialists? The most popular answer is transaction costs, and I think something comparable has bearing on this question.
Continuing the earlier example, it may be trivial to solve my math deficiencies by market-contracting whatever the math need is, but that's assuming I'm capable of knowing what needs to be contracted or understanding its proper scope. If I'm an F at math, the prospect of being able to make the requisite contract becomes tenuous.
More importantly than that, there is no contract that will give you access to the conceptual structures that the actual skill would provide. You see the world slightly different when you have different skills / capabilities -- this is an under-appreciated consequences of Heidegger's framework -- and that kind of leverage really matters, especially for the kind of creative work that I do.
I'm not an F at math, but I'm certainly no expert, and still I can't tell you how much leverage I've got over the years from an intermediate level of linear algebra knowledge, in applications that have nothing to do with linear algebra, regarding topics that have nothing to do with math.
How many other linear algebras are out there, waiting to transform how I see the world, if only I could move off of F? That's the countervailing headwind to the comparative advantage idea, which is admittedly compelling.
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In addition to my experience as a student in a bunch of mathy disciplines, I taught math for a few years. I know it's just an example, but I have not seen very many people who make it usefully far in mathematics through force of will.
I certainly agree with you about how transformative mathematical study is in how we process seemingly unrelated topics. My doubt is that it would be as transformative for people who had to buckle down and will their way through the material.
Like you suggest, people draw those transformative lessons from many places. My expectation is that looking for them in subjects that you find inspiring or interesting will be more fruitful. On that note, though, I do think it's important to give things a chance and not just assume there's nothing in it of value.
I certainly think this isn't a topic where one approach is correct and the other is incorrect. It's more that I think it more often makes sense to focus on your strengths, because that moves you into less dense parts of the skill distribution, which allows you to charge more of a premium.
The reality is that you should be evaluating how the benefit of learning something compares to the cost. Sometimes, that will mean doing something very costly, because it's a bottleneck for a bunch of other stuff you are good at.
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I should add, as supporting evidence, my experience with music.
I'm pretty sure that I'm literally musically retarded. I took lessons on several different instruments as a kid and never got anything out of it, despite quite an investment of time and effort.
For many people, as I understand it, playing music helps them think about things other than music. While I was able to play some set of recognizable songs and answer many basic music questions, it made essentially no impact on my cognition and I think that's because I never connected with it.
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104 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 14 Apr
Outsourcing your weaknesses makes sense in the abstract as a comparative advantage play; but think of Coase as a counter. Why are there corporations at all, and not exclusively one-off networks of specialists? The most popular answer is transaction costs, and I think something comparable has bearing on this question.
The benefit of getting better at your speciality could outweigh the transaction costs of outsourcing your non-speciality.
Continuing the earlier example, it may be trivial to solve my math deficiencies by market-contracting whatever the math need is, but that's assuming I'm capable of knowing what needs to be contracted or understanding its proper scope. If I'm an F at math, the prospect of being able to make the requisite contract becomes tenuous.
You probably don't need an A in math to spot a great math person and you could always outsource the hiring to a trusted math friend (assuming one of your talents is finding such friends). You might get as much benefit discussing something with an outsourcee as you do having it all in your own brain.
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50 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 13 Apr
On a smaller scale, it's a lot easier to find the motivation to get around those kind of pain points, and just make yourself do it, when it's very specific and very costly. That's not at all the same as a general focus on improving weaknesses. It's clearing obstacles out of the way in order to unconstrain strengths.
I was going to say this a tenth as well.
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This is a big part of my parenting approach, inspired by what I know of unschooling. I encourage my daughter to explore her interests. In doing so, she encounters difficulties that she has to navigate. Those difficulties are often things other parents might invest a bunch of energy and frustration into making their kid learn.
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