This is necessary for new ideas and perspectives to come forth. Deep thought and introspection is needed to fix disparate pieces together.
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking highlights beautifully the important role introverts play in a world which increasingly lauds those who are extroverts...
Our information is still siloed.
Even with a powerful search engine like Google some of most interesting research and information is found, (gasp!), at a library. As increasingly more people find the ease of finding information via the internet, might there be value in other ways of research?
Thinking radically different can result in success, but it isn't easy to rock the status quo, unless you are an outsider.
Note Gladwell's upbringing as well as "outsider" status of Vivek Ranadive as he coached his daughter's basketball team having zero experience in the sport. Gladwell's New Yorker piece "How David Beats Goliath - When Underdogs Break the Rules" became the basis of his book.
He is intensely curious.
As noted in the CBS piece, should we trust "received wisdom"? Do we simply take for granted what was told to us? Fortunately, Gladwell does not. More importantly, does the in depth research and thinking needed to validate or refute conventional wisdom. Going back to the original research and first source material is something highlighted by Jim Collins in his book - Great by Choice: Uncertainty, Chaos, and Luck--Why Some Thrive Despite Them All. Collins highlights this example with the race to the South Pole - the successful team challenged the conventional wisdom and not only was first but survived. The other team died.
"There’s this wonderful point when [Norwegian explorer Roald] Amundsen makes what strikes others as a
rash decision. That decision was to land at the Bay of Whales. Now
everybody thought the Bay of Whales was moving ice, and therefore, very
dangerous. But Amundsen had gone back and read all the actual journal
entries of the explorers who had been to that part of the world, dating
back to, I believe, 1841. In those journal entries, he noticed that
there was this fixed, dome-like structure at the Bay of Whales, and it
had been there since 1841. Conclusion? It is not moving. It has been
there since 1841. Because he had this orientation to putting his hands
deep in evidence himself and reading all the journal entries himself, he
has this empirical observation: “That is not moving ice. We can
confidently put our base there,” which gave them a head start. He put
their base at the Bay of Whales rather than at the standard place, which
would be McMurdo Sound."
First heard him and Atul Gawande
speak at a patient safety conference in 2005 in San Francisco and blown
away ever since. I even made a fan page (you are on it)!
That MADE my day (if not the year). Great to hear him again live! I could listen to his stories for 2 to 3 hours or more (thank goodness for YouTube!).
Malcolm Gladwell and Adam Gopnik at the Long Wharf Theatre.
Insights from a great conversation.
Changing One's Mind. The Canadian Jedi Mind Trick, Right? The honest world broker - Canada.
Gladwell wonders why is it really hard for people to accept the notion that changing one's mind is a desirable thing? At 6:40. He quotes President Clinton's observation of George W. Bush at 8:08.
Gopnik notes the Canadian verbal technique to get agreement - appending the word "right" to any sentence which then gives instant adhesion and coercive cohesiveness. This is how Canadians win any debate. Example - "we all know that 6 month old babies are much smarter than
scientists with PhDs, right?" at 10:37.
Gladwell at 14:30 notes that role of Canada in the world is to be a “middle man” honest broker countries in the
world. He notes how infrequently Canada has not adopted the bad habits of it
neighbor.
17:19 the equivalent mythology for America – Boston Tea
Party. He notes a complete ignorance of history.
20:35 in LA get the purest feed of what America is thinking,
doing, feeling. – he was running the Santa Monica stairs he keeping hearing
“And I said to him, that does not work for me.”… we will all be using that
phrase in 6 months. “way and no way”… Unfortunately the popularity of the that
praise has passed. Otherwise he would have used on his tombstone, he had the courage
to stand up to those who said no way and would say way…
22:00 His focus on abolishing the Ivy League.
24:20 don’t ask don’t tell of the institutional educational
area you attended. Is that place where I can get a good education? What is the
brand value of the institution? The second question is irrelevant to getting a
good education. Employers are using the brand strength of the institution as a
proxy for quality. By not asking the question, employers could get you know you
as an individual. 27:00 need to stop making the institutions being part of a
luxury brand. 28:00 the streets in certain LA neighborhoods are named after
Ivy League schools.
30:10 how Naples Florida differs from their typical
audiences of the Upper West Side of New York.
31:00 Marvin Miller – transitions in the country… we’ve
forgotten how not the rich were very rich….
Twitter Does Not Cause Social Change.
37:20 Thoughts about Twitter – Gladwell called out the
absurd overstatements at the time on the role of Twitter and social media’s
impact on Arab Spring. Gladwell noted that a revolution or movement like the
civil rights movement was years in the making. Real social change requires
time, social planning and coordination, and social risk. Twitter suggests
revolution does not require any of that. Only in America can we think that
chance would occur simply by using a smartphone in 2008 in San Jose. It makes a
mockery of the sacrifice needed to make tangible change.
43:50 civil rights movement there was a time where King and
others speak at a church. King and the leaders expected to die in the church by
a mob. The four important civil rights leader with 600 other people were
there. Had it not been for a last minute intervention by the National Guard, we
came this close to having the entire civil rights movement wiped out. Speaking
about how close we had come in not realizing the civil rights movement.
47:55 the older you get the more in awe he is in how these
critical moments are interesting and powerful, specifically are contingent on
individuals and their courage. Again, the example of civil rights movement.
50:30 the problem with Waco on how the situation was
completely misinterpreted. A group of highly devout set of people who lived by
themselves to study scripture was somehow a threat to society. Agrees with Gopnik
that we need to look past to content of the ideology and look at the behavior.
Separatist. Eccentric. Not threatening. Even now, he finds the outcome
problematic.
Health Care Insurance Should be Catastrophic Care.
52:45 Gladwell does not believe Obamacare is the solution to health care.
The book that radicalized him was by David Goldhill. Insurance is the cause of
our problems not the solution. We should have insurance to protect against
catastrophic events.
Predictable events though are medical should be paid for the
same way. Much like buying a shirt. If we had clothing insurance, the shirt
would be $1000 dollars. There would be two people in the back doing processing. We
would have a crisis for those who had no clothing insurance. We would spend 23%
of GDP on shirts!
We should have insurance if one might get hit by a truck.
Gopnik notes that unlike other insurances, we all will be
using it at some point.
Gladwell notes that we will incur costs as we age. However
we won’t have exactly the same outcome. Some will have spent $2 million. Others
passed away peacefully in the sleep.We need to have insurance to help against that wide range of costs.
For the check-up or having a baby, this should not have health insurance. Having a baby is not an
insurable event. In case of something goes wrong, we should insurance against that. For 90
percent of cases where nothing goes wrong, we know what to expect and how much
it should cost. If someone can’t afford it, we should help them out. We should
not construct a massive system.
57:40 favorite story of Canada of a town he lived near. It was
called Berlin because many German immigrants lived there. After World War One,
they changed the name to Ketchner.
10,000 hours is 16 years
59:00 introduction of the topic
1:01 Gladwell - mastery takes a long time. Instead of judging people too quickly we should be slowing down our assessment. In this country we are front-loading where people or what strata they should go into rather than back-loading.