getyourhaa.blogg.se

How to become a polymath
How to become a polymath











Using da Vinci as an example again, he got into anatomy because he wanted to learn how to paint and sculpt body parts better. Once you gain expert status in one topic, you can use that knowledge and reputation and what you’ve learned about mastery to transfer into other topics. I do think, though, that starting with one and diving into it deeply is a better strategy for gaining mastery than trying to focus on all of them at once, at least at the beginning. Da Vinci didn’t specialize in one particular part of art – he tackled them all: painting, drawing, sculpture, and so on. I’m not sure that’s going to make you a polymath automatically. My thought is that you should probably try to pick one deeper topic within each of those subjects to really own, instead of trying to get a general idea and appreciation for each of those broad subjects. Like for math, instead of trying to learn everything there is to know about math, you might focus on statistics as it applies to population control, something like that. To become a polymath, you probably need to gain expert status in at least three separate academic subjects like math, science, politics, philosophy, economics, art, or maybe even some psychology nowadays. As cool as it might be to know everything there is to know about the shrimping business, that won’t add to your street cred as a polymath. Polymaths become masters in a bunch of fields, like Leonardo da Vinci did.īut to become a polymath, you can’t chase just any subject.

how to become a polymath

The difference between polymaths and people like me, people who are just interested in too many subjects, is mastery.













How to become a polymath