Sorry folks, truly smart folks are actually made. This item is an excellent item on how this all comes about.
Let me simplify. Master mathematical tools. All of them lead to brain rewiring. A body of mathematical thought will suddenly switch on if you grind away long enough. Mastering Relativity means switching on Tensor analysis in your brain. The same held true for arithmetic and algebra. Practice forced the rewiring. You are now smarter.
After you have raised your processing ability to a high level and actually long before, you must inhale huge amounts of organized thought. Read books and today read articles. Even read the 13,000 articles i have posted on this blog and my own notes as well. There exist a million or so i have not read. No one can ever be smart who actually knows next to nothing and that particularly includes those who master one discipline and has nothing to say about anything else. Then there is zero chance for inspiration from outside the mental silo.
Then keep it up.
.
How To Tell If Someone Is Truly Smart Or Just Average
How I learned to think like the world’s best and brightest.
Michael Simmons
Have
you ever noticed how some of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs
and leaders see reality in a fundamentally different way? When they
talk, it’s almost as if they’re speaking a different language.
Just look at this interview where Elon Musk describes how he understands cause and effect:
“I look at the future from the standpoint of probabilities. It’s like a branching stream of probabilities, and there are actions that we can take that affect those probabilities or that accelerate one thing or slow down another thing. I may introduce something new to the probability stream.”
Unusual, right? One writer who interviewed Musk describes his mental process like this:
“Musk sees people as computers, and he sees his brain software as the most important product he owns — and since there aren’t companies out there designing brain software, he designed his own, beta tests it every day, and makes constant updates.”
Musk’s top priority is designing the software in his brain. Have you ever heard anyone else describe their life that way?
Self-made billionaire Ray Dalio is no less “weird.” In his book, Principles,
he describes how he sees reality: “Nature is a machine. The family is a
machine. The life cycle is like a machine.” Dalio’s company, the
largest hedge fund in the world, records every conversation (meeting or
phone call) inside the company and has built several custom apps that
allow any employee to rate any other employee in real time. The data is
then added to profiles that each employee can see and is subsequently
fed into an artificial intelligence system that helps employees make
better decisions.
Dalio also describes his day in much different terms than you would expect from a CEO:
“I’m very much stepping back. I’m much more likely to go to what I describe as a higher level. There’s the blizzard that everyone is normally in, and that’s where they’re caught with all of these things coming at them. And I prefer to go above the blizzard and just organize.”
Charlie Munger uses a “cognitive bias checklist” before making investment decisions to ensure he properly applies the correct mental models. Warren Buffett uses decision trees. Jeff Bezos thinks of Amazon as being at Day One even though it’s been around more than 20 years.
What’s
going on here? Are these just the idiosyncrasies of geniuses, or do
these entrepreneurs employ a way of using their brain that we too could
learn from in order to become smarter, more successful, and more
impactful ourselves?
How I Learned to Think Like the World’s Best and Brightest
Over the years, as I’ve studied all of the above entrepreneurs,
I’ve also aggressively applied their teachings. Even if I didn’t
understand what they were saying at first, I took their advice on faith.
I’ve
applied Ray Dalio’s root-cause analysis approach to our company. Now,
throughout the week, everyone on our team logs any problems they’re
facing. Then, we have a weekly phone call to discuss our biggest,
recurring problem and its possible root cause.
I’ve applied Charlie Munger’s approach to mental models and collected thousands of pages of notes in order to create in-depth briefs on each model.
I’ve applied Musk’s probabilistic thinking
to major decisions by listing out all of the potential decisions I
could make and then assigning a cost, potential value, and probability
to each one.
I’ve also created an experimentation engine like Bezos and Zuckerberg, and we now perform more than 1,000 experiments each year at our company. Finally, I now follow the 5-hour rule and spend at least two hours a day on deliberate learning.
After
five years of emulating the leaders I most admire, I realized something
surprising was happening to my thought process. I wasn’t just learning
new strategies or hacks. I was learning a deeper and fundamentally
different way of understanding reality — like I’ve accessed a hidden,
secret level in the game of life. It’s thrilling to uncover deeper
layers of understanding that I didn’t even know existed.
When I
look back on my former self, I feel like I’m looking at a different
person altogether. As previously “unsolvable” problems from my past come
up again, I find I can solve many of them now. It is a great feeling to
see previously insurmountable problems — both personal and
professional — and realize I now have the tools to surmount them.
I’ll
give you an example. In my twenties, I invested $100,000 into a
business idea that never took off. Now that I understand cognitive
biases — thanks to Charlie Munger — I see how the pernicious sunk cost fallacy
wreaked havoc upon my decision-making. Today when I consider new
business ideas, instead of just imagining how great they’re going to be,
I spend just as much time envisioning what could go wrong — another
Munger hack. I no longer have to remind myself to think this way
anymore. I’ve internalized these concepts and now my mind actually works differently.
I
once heard a coach talk about changing a client’s way of seeing the
world in a way that would blow their mind. When he looked into his
client’ eyes and could see him or her really getting it, he’d say, “Now,
you’re in my reality!” That’s how I felt. Reality somehow feels
different on an aesthetic level — as if I’m cutting through the levels
of illusion and noise we normally see and getting a more direct view.
The best example I can think of is that it’s like wearing augmented
reality glasses that constantly feed you relevant wisdom about the
situation you’re in.
Ultimately, what I’ve learned is that
billionaires don’t have odd ways of talking. They, instead, are
visionaries who see the world in a deeper way — one that is both
incredibly effective and also learnable.
The Difference Between Average and Brilliant: Effective Mental Models
“Mental models are to your brain as apps are to your smartphone.” -Jayme Hoffman
According to Model Theory,
we all always use mental models in our thinking. “Mental models are
psychological representations of real, hypothetical, or imaginary
situations,” according to the formal definition.
Less formally, a mental model is a simplified, scaled-down version of
some aspect of the world: a schematic of a particular piece of reality. A
model can be represented as a blueprint, a symbol, an idea, a formula,
and in many other ways. We all unconsciously create models of how the
world works, how the economy works, how politics works, how other people
work, how we work, how our brains work, how our day is supposed to go,
and so on.
The more effective the model, the more effectively we
are able to act, predict, innovate, explain, explore, and communicate.
The worse the model, the more we fall prey to costly mistakes. The
difference between great thinkers and ordinary thinkers is that, for
ordinary thinkers, the process of using models is unconscious and
reactive. For great thinkers, it is conscious and proactive.
All of the extraordinary people mentioned above collect the most effective models across all disciplines, stress-test them, and creatively apply them to their daily lives. Mental models are so valuable that billionaire Ray Dalio’s only book is full of his best mental models. Charlie Mungers’ only book is packed full of his top mental models
too. One of the most common pieces of advice that Elon Musk gives is to
think from first principles. Mental models and first principles are
similar in that they each model deeper levels of reality.
While
most people think about knowledge just horizontally (ie — across
fields), these great thinkers also think about knowledge vertically in
terms of depth. Musk explains deep knowledge in a Reddit AMA,
“It is important to view knowledge as sort of a semantic tree — make
sure you understand the fundamental principles (Musk calls these ‘first
principles’), i.e. the trunk and big branches, before you get into the
leaves/details or there is nothing for them to hang onto.” In another
interview, Musk gives an example, “I tend to approach things from a
physics framework. Physics teaches you to reason from first principles
rather than by analogy.”
Physicist David Deutsch explains it even further,
“It’s in the nature of foundations, that the foundations in one field
are also the foundations of other fields…The way that we reach many
truths is by understanding things more deeply and therefore more
broadly. That’s the nature of the concept of a foundation… just as in
architecture, all buildings all literally stand on the same foundation;
namely the earth. All buildings stand on the same theoretical base.” By
understanding verticality and depth, you can see how learning mental
models connects things that were previously separate and disconnected.
Just as every leaf on a tree is connected by twigs, which are connected
by branches, which are connected by a tree trunk, so too are ideas connected by deeper and deeper ideas.
One
of the most effective and universal mental models is the 80/20 Rule:
the idea that 20 percent of inputs can lead to 80 percent of outputs.
This same 80/20 idea can be applied to our personal lives (productivity,
diet, relationships, exercise, learning, etc.) and our professional
lives (hiring, firing, management, sales, marketing, etc). As such, you
can see how the 80/20 Rule connects many disparate fields. This is what
all mental models do.
To apply the 80/20 Rule, at the beginning of
the day we can ask ourselves, “Of all the things on my to-do list, what
are the 20 percent that will create 80 percent of the results?” When
we’re searching for what to read next, we can ask ourselves, “Of all the
millions of books I could buy, which ones could really change my life?”
When considering who to spend time with, we can ask ourselves, “Which
handful of people in my life give me the most happiness, the most
meaning, and the greatest connection?” In short, consistently using the
80/20 Rule can help us get leverage by focusing on the few things that
really matter and ignoring the majority that don’t.
My team
and I have spent dozens of hours assembling the largest list of the most
useful mental models in the world (that we’re aware of). We’ve done
this by curating and combining the most useful models of other mental
model collectors. To access this spreadsheet for free, visit the download page.
Mental Models Are the New Alphabet
“You can’t do much carpentry with your bare hands and you can’t do much thinking with your bare brain.” — Bo Dahlbom, philosopher and computer scientist
Evolution is so slow that a child born today
is — biologically — indistinguishable from a child born 30,000 years
ago. Yet, here I am typing on a MacBook, while my ancestors spent most
of their time collecting berries, throwing spears, and chipping rocks.
So what’s the difference between someone born 30,000 years ago and me?3
Tools.3
Between
then and now, there has been an unprecedented explosion and evolution
of tools that have collectively created modern society.3
We all
intuitively understand this. We all know that if we didn’t have basic
tools like fire or the plow, or more complex ones like a Macbook or car,
our lives would be completely different. Watch any post-apocalyptic TV
or movie series and you can see how the world quickly falls apart when
tools fail.3
But there’s a major blindspot people have when it comes to understanding tools.
Many people fail to appreciate non-physical tools — tools that they
cannot touch, hear, or see. But mental tools are just as powerful and
complex as physical tools. For example, consider the alphabet: the
Western alphabet is a mental tool that wasn’t invented until around 1100
BC (pictorial writing systems like hieroglyphics were invented much
earlier). Now we take it for granted, but at the time, it was a
cutting-edge tool. Though it was adopted slowly at first — only 30
percent of the population could read and write before the printing press
was invented in 1440 — once it began to spread, literate individuals
had a huge leg up. In fact, literacy is now so important that it’s a
national priority for all governments. That is the power of an effective
mental tool.3
It’s by understanding the significance of the alphabet that we can understand the significance of mental models too…
- Mental models are also fundamental and critical mental tools.
- Mental models represent large chunks of reality that can be combined together to create even more complex and useful “supermodels.” This is similar to how letters can be combined into words, which can be combined into sentences.
- Mental models should be taught early in one’s life, because nearly everything else builds on them.
- Mental models trigger higher-order thinking. This is similar to how becoming literate triggers a whole slew of higher-order thinking capabilities known as the Alphabet Effect.
As
society evolves, it’s becoming more and more complex. There are more
people, more tools, and more knowledge, all globally connected in
complicated ways. Therefore, people who are able to model how this more complex reality works will be far more successful at navigating it. Or,
as Ray Dalio says in his book, “Truth — or, more precisely, an accurate
understanding of reality — is the essential foundation for any good
outcome.”3
People who are able to model how a complex business
works in their minds are more likely to be successful business leaders,
because they must understand the complex subtleties of finance (balance
sheet, cash flow, and income statements), HR (recruiting and managing A+
players), product development, marketing/sales, and how they all
interact with their mental models of their various stakeholders
(community, customers, suppliers, employees, investors). Before an
architect can build a house, he or she must first design a model of that
house. That architect must have an understanding of how the electrical,
plumbing, design, materials, pricing, and so on come together to create
a safe, beautiful building at the right price that the market will
purchase. Someone who architects a skyscraper must have a much more
complex latticework of mental models than someone who models a
two-bedroom house.
Furthermore, as people progress in their
careers, they must evolve the amount, diversity, and quality of their
mental models if they want to have higher and higher levels of success
and impact:
Why We Should All Become Mental Model Collectors
“You may have noticed students who just try to remember and pound back what is remembered. Well, they fail in school and in life. You’ve got to hang experience on a latticework of models in your head.” — Charlie Munger (self-made billionaire entrepreneur and investor)
So how
do you build complex, accurate mental models? Let’s me explain with a
simple example: dogs. Let’s hypothetically imagine for a moment that we
have no idea what a dog is. We’ve never seen or heard of one before.
Then,
one day, we see a dog that looks like the image below on the left, and
someone tells us that this is a dog. “Ah, I get it,” we say. “Now I know
what a dog is.”
But if we’ve only seen one
dog, technically we don’t really know what a dog is. With just this
single case example, our definition of a dog would be: a large black and
brown animal with pointy ears that sits down, and sticks out its
tongue. Bring out a Pomeranian dog and with only this mental model in
mind, you are likely to ask ‘What is that?’
The numerous dog
models on the right (the contrasting cases example) show us that dogs
can come in all different colors, sizes, and shapes. At the same time,
we can see the underlying element of “dogness” that they all share. This
emergent element of “dogness” is a deeper mental model, and humans
created the word “dog” to symbolize this mental model. Using that mental
model, you can identify an animal as a dog even if you’ve never seen a
particular breed of dog before.
What can we take away from this example that is relevant to our own life?
Many
of the world’s problems result from people overgeneralizing from
simplistic models just like our hypothetical one-size-fits-all “dog”.
Here are three prime examples:
- Black/white thinking (you’re either a good person or a bad person with no gray area in between)
- Us/Them thinking (people outside your personal religion, nationality, or belief system are the enemy).
- All manner of stereotypes — race, gender, politics, ethnicity, etc.
Over-applying
models is no different than a carpenter trying to build a house with
one single hammer. All models, no matter how brilliant, are imperfect.
The beauty of using multiple and diverse models is that many of the
imperfections cancel each other out, allowing you to create a new
“emergent” model that transcends all of the other models.
Great
thinkers improve their thinking by taking in a larger quantity of
information and developing a greater diversity of models. For example, a
novice chess player might only know the name of each piece and how it
moves across the board. But a grandmaster has memorized no less than 50,000 chunks (mental models)
of increasing complexity including openings, closings, patterns
throughout the game, and how one single move can lead to a particular
result 10 moves or more down the line.
Many, diverse models also lead to heightened creativity.
Nothing is truly original. Everything is derived by combining existing
building blocks. Babies are created when a man and a woman have sex. New
tools are created when pre-existing tools have “tool sex.” New ideas
are created through “idea sex.” In the same way, we can build more
complex mental models by combining simple mental models. For example, by
understanding cause-and-effect mental models better, we can more
effectively prioritize what’s important for us to do now to cause
something we want in the future. The larger our base of mental models,
the more creative combinations we can form. The more unique our mental
models are compared to other people, the more we can think in ways that
they can’t even fathom.
Through constant and diverse learning,
we can organically build better and more varied models of reality. And
those models will help us navigate the world far more effectively and
creatively. Just as a blueprint is necessary for constructing a stable
building, mental models of how the world works help us construct a
better — and more stable — life.
No comments:
Post a Comment