Psychologist robin hogarth am coined the term 'wicked domains' He said that in a wicked domain, some information is not clear. Rules aren't static and feedback may or may not be available all the time. And so for that kind of world, breadth of training predicts breadth of transfer. The broader your training experiences are, the more able you are to apply that knowledge and skill to situations you've never seen before. That's what transfer means.
David Epstein (https://www.davidepstein.com/) is the author of the New York Times bestseller The Sports Gene and his new blockbuster book, Range (https://amzn.to/2K449m6), which makes a powerful, science-backed argument about success. Contrary to those who say "find your thing as early as possible, then focus on becoming the best at it," it turns out those who succeed at the highest levels and stay there longest do not specialize early or become world-class experts in one narrow domain. They actually do the exact opposite. They stay generalists for as long as possible. Early specializers often rise fast, then burn out, leaving those playing a longer, more generalized game to eventually lap them, rise higher and stay successful longer. We dive into the eye-opening research, along with Epstein's remarkable personal journey in today's conversation.
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