Polymath: Master Multiple Disciplines, Learn New Skills, Think Flexibly, and Become Extraordinary Autodidact
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About this ebook
Expertise pays; polymathy pays exponentially. Build a world-class skillset that will make you unique and irreplaceable.
Polymath: a person of wide knowledge and learning. The art of becoming a polymath is really about maximizing your opportunities in life. Don’t be the person with the hammer - be the person with an entire woodshop at their disposal.
Learn to think outside the box and adopt a flexible mindset. Become multi-faceted.
Polymath shows you how to be a singular entity, like Benjamin Franklin, Leonardo da Vinci, and Thomas Young. No, you won’t achieve what they achieved, but you will understand the skills, habits, and techniques to master multiple realms of knowledge and skills.
Almost every famous genius you know is a polymath. This book will trace their journeys and change the way you look at learning. Jack of all trades, master of none? No such thing.
A complete learning framework, from novice to expert, in any skill or discipline.
Peter Hollins has studied psychology and peak human performance for over a dozen years and is a bestselling author. He has worked with a multitude of individuals to unlock their potential and path towards success. His writing draws on his academic, coaching, and research experience.
Become a modern day Renaissance man/woman; broaden your horizons.
•Learn why you should become a pi-shaped polymath.
•The primary traits you need to foster genius.
•A 10-step process of learning a new topic or skill from A to Z.
•How to choose and select your unique set of skills.
•How to create your “second brain” on paper.
•Examples from every era of mankind.
Learn new perspectives, understand people better, and gain confidence to break your comfort zone.
Polymathy is the most important skill for your career, hands down. It makes you one-of-a-kind. Become the most unique person you know. Create new routines and habits. Upgrade your life circumstances and see how mentally tough flexible thinking makes you. It boils down to this one question: are you content with your life circumstances? No? Then embrace the polymath mindset.
Peter Hollins
Pete Hollins is a bestselling author and human psychology and behavior researcher. He is a dedicated student of the human condition. He possesses a BS and MA in psychology, and has worked with dozens of people from all walks of life. After working in private practice for years, he has turned his sights to writing and applying his years of education to help people improve their lives from the inside out. He enjoys hiking with his family, drinking craft beers, and attempting to paint. He is based in Seattle, Washington. To learn more about Hollins and his work, visit PeteHollins.com.
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Polymath - Peter Hollins
Table of Contents
Polymath: Master Multiple Disciplines, Learn New Skills, Think Flexibly, and Become Extraordinary Autodidact
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Jack of All Trades
Master of None
What’s Your Shape?
The Renaissance Mindset
T-Shaped Problems
Chapter 2. The Polymathic Mind
Adaptable and Open
Experimental
Beginner
Belief
Relentless
Chapter 3. Novice to Expert in 10 Steps
Step 1: The Broad Overview
Step 2: Narrow the Scope
Step 3: Define Success
Step 4: Compiling Resources
Step 5: Create a Curriculum
Step 6: Filter, Filter, Filter
Step 7: Dive In
Step 8: Exploration
Step 9: Clarification
Step 10: Teach
The Power of Notes
Chapter 4. Intentional Discovery
Einstein and Combinatory Play
Stacking
Stack Strategically
Chapter 5. Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
The Original Renaissance Man
The Inventor of the German Language
The Man who Proved Isaac Newton Wrong
The Man Who Thought, Therefore He Was
The Builder of Pyramids
Distilled Knowledge
Summary Guide
Chapter 1. Jack of All Trades
Benjamin Franklin is one of American history’s most successful and influential figures. What exactly was he famous for? At this point he’s mostly relegated to political theory, but during his own time, he was known for just about everything.
Franklin was an accomplished inventor, respected politician and leading scientist. He engaged with current affairs, wrote prolifically on many topics, and acted as a diplomat, statesman, and passionate activist. He was a businessman who founded many organizations, such as the University of Pennsylvania and the first ever fire department in Philadelphia.
Franklin was a postmaster and political satirist. He invented a more efficient freestanding stove, a musical instrument (the armonica, if you’re interested) and bifocals to deal with his own failing vision. He dabbled in electricity and conducted the famous lightning, metal key, and kite experiment. Oh, and he was one of the five key people who put together the American Declaration of Independence and the American Constitution.
His immense contributions to a wide range of fields make people wonder where the United States of American would even be without Benjamin Franklin. Many schoolchildren accidentally believe he was a president at some point—it’s not true, but it isn’t hard to imagine the man finding time to run a country on the side of the countless other projects, inventions and enterprises he managed.
So, what is Benjamin Franklin famous for?
We could say that this sheer breadth of knowledge distinguishes him—i.e. that he’s a polymath.
This term from the Greek means, having learnt much
and was seemingly made for men like Franklin. Polymaths have knowledge in a wide range of subjects and fields, rather than specializing in just one. They are accomplished in multiple disciplines, seemingly thriving in the field of human enquiry itself, beyond the boundaries we draw between categories of study. The world’s most famous polymaths blend academic fields or create new ones from scratch. They are the quintessential Renaissance men
who can do a little (or a lot) of everything and inspire us to imagine what the limits of human understanding and learning really are. It seems like they possess superpowers considering their prowess in multiple realms of knowledge. Other famous polymaths are also people you know by name and reputation—Leonardo da Vinci, Rene Descartes, Elon Musk, Plato, Isaac Newton, Galileo, Michelangelo, Archimedes, and so on. It may not be possible to reach the levels of these people, but the quest of polymathism is something that could very well boost your life to new heights. Rather than being an inherent quality, it can be learned and cultivated by anyone—including you.
This book is about what it means to become a polymath, a Renaissance man, and a versatile autodidact (someone who teaches themselves
). In our complex modern world of increasingly narrow specialization, we can instead choose to develop ourselves holistically—becoming our best in the sciences, the arts, politics, academics, engineering, social affairs, literature, sports, and spiritual matters.
Our goal as aspiring polymaths is therefore to become the kind of well-rounded and multiply accomplished human beings who can do all of these things with a degree of expertise. The name of the game is development, learning and mastery—the particular fields we develop ourselves in are almost beside the point.
Master of None
Have you heard the expression, Jack of all trades, master of none?
It’s not a positive connotation that we associate with people who have many interests and spread their time around liberally.
Despite revering intellectual powerhouses like Benjamin Franklin, in real life some of us are dismissive of people who flit about, never settling in one field but entertaining several (sometimes wildly different) interests. The debate between the generalist and the specialist is ongoing and has fallen in and out of favor throughout history. When you survey the most prominent and successful scientists, it’s easy to see that the majority were decidedly generalists. Rather than taking a shallow and ineffectual approach, they seemed instead to achieve even more for the fact that they had multiple interests at any one time.
Ultra-successful entrepreneurs have also been known to dabble widely, and continue to undertake projects of all stripes after they find success in one area. We could argue that these people are all geniuses who engaged with multiple disciplines because they were smart and successful, rather than the idea that their success was in part their versatility.
But on the other hand, there are now several convincing studies showing a link between a person’s achievements and the number of distinct interests and skills they hold. A 2009 paper by Robert Root-Bernstein explored data from Nobel Laureates in all disciplines and found a strong connection between creativity and being a polymath, thus challenging the idea that specialization is required for success.
Let’s take a closer look. When most people talk about famous polymaths, they are referring to people who have not just earned competencies in different areas, but who manage to creatively integrate those abilities—and the sum is inevitably greater than the parts!
These are the people who are adept at not just one type of problem (and therefore one type of solution) but who are skillful at learning itself. They can blend and cross-pollinate ideas, methods and solutions from all across mankind’s rich tapestry, which often allows them to come up with game-changing Big Ideas. Many of the true leaps in a particular field or science have come from intelligent visitors from other disciplines who brought a fresh perspective and found a way to link material to the benefit of both fields—or even the creation of an entirely new branch.
Imagine a T-shape. The horizontal bar on the top represents breadth of knowledge across domains, while the vertical bar represents depth of knowledge in just one area. If you’ve read Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers, you may be familiar with the 10,000 hour
rule, which claims that 10,000 hours of deliberate quality practice makes one an expert in a particular field. But this may not really apply to polymaths—they appear to make deep breakthroughs without putting in the hours.
It’s as though the creative combining of skills across disciplines allows for quicker breakthroughs than merely hammering away in just one field, unaware of anything else in other domains. When it comes to business or entrepreneurial polymaths, something else becomes clear: being a generalist often means way less competition—it’s an open field. A T-shape is not the goal for a polymath; rather, a pi shape is, or even a comb shape, representing depth of knowledge in multiple realms. The specific combinations of these realms is where the magic happens.
Charles Darwin, Elon Musk and Leonardo da Vinci are famous polymaths, but you don’t need to reach their level to benefit from their approach. You don’t need several degrees, or to dabble in the same topics (physics, politics, business and literature are all common—but rather than assuming there’s something fundamental about these topics, ask why a polymath would be drawn to them).
Being a polymath does require something of a perspective shift: rather than running as far as you can in a single race, you open your field of perception to take in as much as possible, and draw atypical connections to link the knowledge you already have in surprising ways. Be probing and bold in thought; ask unusual questions and put things together that are ordinarily separate, just to see what happens.
A person might work in an ordinary office job doing, say, digital marketing. But they may be a voracious reader in their spare time, an active member in local politics and a regular contributor to an out-there fiction magazine group that publishes poetry and short stories.
Such a person might use, for example, their knowledge of Eric Berne’s psychological game
model together with a keen understanding of the political climate in the area to design a new reputation management package
for their clients, thus winning them a promotion to manage this new department in the company.
Rather than simply plowing away in the same old conceptual ruts, this person uses a creative blend of their skills and knowledge base to promote themselves in the workplace and literally open up new, potentially lucrative avenues. As is the case with many polymaths, they almost create their own jobs and roles, using their unique personalities and combination of skills to pursue precisely what interests them—often for profit.
It may be that in our modern world, we reward those who can synthesize, network,