To be expert in something you need just to put a lot of work in to it?
5 points| sasha_fishter | 2 years ago
I recently saw a documentary about Pirate Bay, and I notice a pattern. I.e. Gottfrid Svartholm was all into the building stuff, he learned along the way, probably yes, he read books, articles, whatever, but what I've seen in many people his calibre is that they just work on something and learned more and more. They've become experts even thought they maybe didn't realised that.
So the question is, do we need to read all those book, articles, podcasts, documentaries to be good, or is it mostly waste of time that we could spend learning through practice?
Ekaros|2 years ago
And then there is also keeping up with the current trends and best practises. You could be expert in some obsolete version of technology. And it could have been replaced in wide spread use with new version or different thing.
So some time spend on following podcasts or news articles or documentaries is useful, but I would say this is minor compared to actually doing the thing.
h2odragon|2 years ago
My best approach to things is "jump in the swamp and thrash wildly," more often than not. The process is likely to look ugly to bystanders, and include a lot of splash and noise that doesn't obviously advance progress.
Others might prefer the more considered approach, with advance plans, co-ordination checkpoints, well defined metrics and signposts placed ahead of the work along the route, so that they know where they're at, and where they're going, all the time.
I don't say they're wrong; its just that approach doesn't work as well for me. Those for whom it does work might feel they'd drown trying to do things my way. That without the preparation of prior study, they'd drop under the surface with a bloop never to be seen again.
There's reasons one approach might be better than the other in a given moment: Are we hunting alligator for dinner tonight, or are we seeking to build a bridge over the swamp without disturbing potential piranha under the surface?
Many people simply enjoy the observation part of scholarship, without ever reaching the level of inspiration that would lead them to do something with the knowledge they've gained through it. Nothing wrong with that; especially when you don't have a goal you burn for. Unfortunately I feel our educational traditions have come to value that for itself. Actual passion is unseemly at best.
isralcduke|2 years ago
isralcduke|2 years ago
unknown|2 years ago
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ano-ther|2 years ago
The advice part helps with two things though: (1) it speeds up the learning process because you don’t have to find out everything yourself and (2) helps you reflect on your practice which boosts the feedback loop.
coxomb|2 years ago
Books will only get you so far. You have to do the work. It's not our thoughts and brilliant ideas, it's our actions which matter in the end. Did you execute?
gregjor|2 years ago
BMc2020|2 years ago
082349872349872|2 years ago
(The biggest hurdle is getting enough expertise that you can ignore the dross?)
The flip side of this is you can't just read advice; you have to try it (and maybe even try its opposite). Expertise is not a spectator sport.