How To Do Great Work

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 64

How to Do Great Work

July 2023

If you collected lists of techniques for doing great work in


a lot of different fields, what would the intersection look
like? I decided to find out by making it.

Partly my goal was to create a guide that could be used


by someone working in any field. But I was also curious
about the shape of the intersection. And one thing this
exercise shows is that it does have a definite shape; it's
not just a point labelled "work hard."

The following recipe assumes you're very ambitious.

The first step is to decide what to work on. The work you
choose needs to have three qualities: it has to be
something you have a natural aptitude for, that you have a
deep interest in, and that offers scope to do great work.

In practice you don't have to worry much about the third


criterion. Ambitious people are if anything already too
conservative about it. So all you need to do is find
something you have an aptitude for and great interest in.
[1]

That sounds straightforward, but it's often quite difficult.


When you're young you don't know what you're good at
or what different kinds of work are like. Some kinds of
work you end up doing may not even exist yet. So while
some people know what they want to do at 14, most have
to figure it out.

The way to figure out what to work on is by working. If


you're not sure what to work on, guess. But pick
something and get going. You'll probably guess wrong
some of the time, but that's fine. It's good to know about
multiple things; some of the biggest discoveries come
from noticing connections between different fields.

Develop a habit of working on your own projects. Don't


let "work" mean something other people tell you to do. If
you do manage to do great work one day, it will probably
be on a project of your own. It may be within some bigger
project, but you'll be driving your part of it.

What should your projects be? Whatever seems to you


excitingly ambitious. As you grow older and your taste in
projects evolves, exciting and important will converge. At
7 it may seem excitingly ambitious to build huge things
out of Lego, then at 14 to teach yourself calculus, till at 21
you're starting to explore unanswered questions in
physics. But always preserve excitingness.

There's a kind of excited curiosity that's both the engine


and the rudder of great work. It will not only drive you,
but if you let it have its way, will also show you what to
work on.

What are you excessively curious about — curious to a


degree that would bore most other people? That's what
you're looking for.

Once you've found something you're excessively


interested in, the next step is to learn enough about it to
get you to one of the frontiers of knowledge. Knowledge
expands fractally, and from a distance its edges look
smooth, but once you learn enough to get close to one,
they turn out to be full of gaps.

The next step is to notice them. This takes some skill,


because your brain wants to ignore such gaps in order to
make a simpler model of the world. Many discoveries
have come from asking questions about things that
everyone else took for granted. [2]
If the answers seem strange, so much the better. Great
work often has a tincture of strangeness. You see this from
painting to math. It would be affected to try to
manufacture it, but if it appears, embrace it.

Boldly chase outlier ideas, even if other people aren't


interested in them — in fact, especially if they aren't. If
you're excited about some possibility that everyone else
ignores, and you have enough expertise to say precisely
what they're all overlooking, that's as good a bet as you'll
find. [3]

Four steps: choose a field, learn enough to get to the


frontier, notice gaps, explore promising ones. This is how
practically everyone who's done great work has done it,
from painters to physicists.

Steps two and four will require hard work. It may not be
possible to prove that you have to work hard to do great
things, but the empirical evidence is on the scale of the
evidence for mortality. That's why it's essential to work on
something you're deeply interested in. Interest will drive
you to work harder than mere diligence ever could.

The three most powerful motives are curiosity, delight,


and the desire to do something impressive. Sometimes
they converge, and that combination is the most powerful
of all.

The big prize is to discover a new fractal bud. You notice a


crack in the surface of knowledge, pry it open, and there's
a whole world inside.

Let's talk a little more about the complicated business of


figuring out what to work on. The main reason it's hard is
that you can't tell what most kinds of work are like except
by doing them. Which means the four steps overlap: you
may have to work at something for years before you know
how much you like it or how good you are at it. And in the
meantime you're not doing, and thus not learning about,
most other kinds of work. So in the worst case you choose
late based on very incomplete information. [4]

The nature of ambition exacerbates this problem.


Ambition comes in two forms, one that precedes interest
in the subject and one that grows out of it. Most people
who do great work have a mix, and the more you have of
the former, the harder it will be to decide what to do.

The educational systems in most countries pretend it's


easy. They expect you to commit to a field long before
you could know what it's really like. And as a result an
ambitious person on an optimal trajectory will often read
to the system as an instance of breakage.

It would be better if they at least admitted it — if they


admitted that the system not only can't do much to help
you figure out what to work on, but is designed on the
assumption that you'll somehow magically guess as a
teenager. They don't tell you, but I will: when it comes to
figuring out what to work on, you're on your own. Some
people get lucky and do guess correctly, but the rest will
find themselves scrambling diagonally across tracks laid
down on the assumption that everyone does.

What should you do if you're young and ambitious but


don't know what to work on? What you should not do is
drift along passively, assuming the problem will solve
itself. You need to take action. But there is no systematic
procedure you can follow. When you read biographies of
people who've done great work, it's remarkable how
much luck is involved. They discover what to work on as a
result of a chance meeting, or by reading a book they
happen to pick up. So you need to make yourself a big
target for luck, and the way to do that is to be curious. Try
lots of things, meet lots of people, read lots of books, ask
lots of questions. [5]

When in doubt, optimize for interestingness. Fields


change as you learn more about them. What
mathematicians do, for example, is very different from
what you do in high school math classes. So you need to
give different types of work a chance to show you what
they're like. But a field should become increasingly
interesting as you learn more about it. If it doesn't, it's
probably not for you.

Don't worry if you find you're interested in different things


than other people. The stranger your tastes in
interestingness, the better. Strange tastes are often strong
ones, and a strong taste for work means you'll be
productive. And you're more likely to find new things if
you're looking where few have looked before.

One sign that you're suited for some kind of work is when
you like even the parts that other people find tedious or
frightening.

But fields aren't people; you don't owe them any loyalty. If
in the course of working on one thing you discover
another that's more exciting, don't be afraid to switch.

If you're making something for people, make sure it's


something they actually want. The best way to do this is
to make something you yourself want. Write the story you
want to read; build the tool you want to use. Since your
friends probably have similar interests, this will also get
you your initial audience.

This should follow from the excitingness rule. Obviously


the most exciting story to write will be the one you want
to read. The reason I mention this case explicitly is that so
many people get it wrong. Instead of making what they
want, they try to make what some imaginary, more
sophisticated audience wants. And once you go down
that route, you're lost. [6]

There are a lot of forces that will lead you astray when
you're trying to figure out what to work on.
Pretentiousness, fashion, fear, money, politics, other
people's wishes, eminent frauds. But if you stick to what
you find genuinely interesting, you'll be proof against all
of them. If you're interested, you're not astray.
Following your interests may sound like a rather passive
strategy, but in practice it usually means following them
past all sorts of obstacles. You usually have to risk
rejection and failure. So it does take a good deal of
boldness.

But while you need boldness, you don't usually need


much planning. In most cases the recipe for doing great
work is simply: work hard on excitingly ambitious projects,
and something good will come of it. Instead of making a
plan and then executing it, you just try to preserve certain
invariants.

The trouble with planning is that it only works for


achievements you can describe in advance. You can win a
gold medal or get rich by deciding to as a child and then
tenaciously pursuing that goal, but you can't discover
natural selection that way.

I think for most people who want to do great work, the


right strategy is not to plan too much. At each stage do
whatever seems most interesting and gives you the best
options for the future. I call this approach "staying
upwind." This is how most people who've done great
work seem to have done it.

Even when you've found something exciting to work on,


working on it is not always straightforward. There will be
times when some new idea makes you leap out of bed in
the morning and get straight to work. But there will also
be plenty of times when things aren't like that.

You don't just put out your sail and get blown forward by
inspiration. There are headwinds and currents and hidden
shoals. So there's a technique to working, just as there is
to sailing.

For example, while you must work hard, it's possible to


work too hard, and if you do that you'll find you get
diminishing returns: fatigue will make you stupid, and
eventually even damage your health. The point at which
work yields diminishing returns depends on the type.
Some of the hardest types you might only be able to do
for four or five hours a day.
Ideally those hours will be contiguous. To the extent you
can, try to arrange your life so you have big blocks of time
to work in. You'll shy away from hard tasks if you know you
might be interrupted.

It will probably be harder to start working than to keep


working. You'll often have to trick yourself to get over that
initial threshold. Don't worry about this; it's the nature of
work, not a flaw in your character. Work has a sort of
activation energy, both per day and per project. And since
this threshold is fake in the sense that it's higher than the
energy required to keep going, it's ok to tell yourself a lie
of corresponding magnitude to get over it.

It's usually a mistake to lie to yourself if you want to do


great work, but this is one of the rare cases where it isn't.
When I'm reluctant to start work in the morning, I often
trick myself by saying "I'll just read over what I've got so
far." Five minutes later I've found something that seems
mistaken or incomplete, and I'm off.

Similar techniques work for starting new projects. It's ok to


lie to yourself about how much work a project will entail,
for example. Lots of great things began with someone
saying "How hard could it be?"
This is one case where the young have an advantage.
They're more optimistic, and even though one of the
sources of their optimism is ignorance, in this case
ignorance can sometimes beat knowledge.

Try to finish what you start, though, even if it turns out to


be more work than you expected. Finishing things is not
just an exercise in tidiness or self-discipline. In many
projects a lot of the best work happens in what was meant
to be the final stage.

Another permissible lie is to exaggerate the importance


of what you're working on, at least in your own mind. If
that helps you discover something new, it may turn out
not to have been a lie after all. [7]

Since there are two senses of starting work — per day and
per project — there are also two forms of procrastination.
Per-project procrastination is far the more dangerous. You
put off starting that ambitious project from year to year
because the time isn't quite right. When you're
procrastinating in units of years, you can get a lot not
done. [8]

One reason per-project procrastination is so dangerous is


that it usually camouflages itself as work. You're not just
sitting around doing nothing; you're working industriously
on something else. So per-project procrastination doesn't
set off the alarms that per-day procrastination does.
You're too busy to notice it.

The way to beat it is to stop occasionally and ask yourself:


Am I working on what I most want to work on?" When
you're young it's ok if the answer is sometimes no, but
this gets increasingly dangerous as you get older. [9]

Great work usually entails spending what would seem to


most people an unreasonable amount of time on a
problem. You can't think of this time as a cost, or it will
seem too high. You have to find the work sufficiently
engaging as it's happening.

There may be some jobs where you have to work


diligently for years at things you hate before you get to
the good part, but this is not how great work happens.
Great work happens by focusing consistently on
something you're genuinely interested in. When you
pause to take stock, you're surprised how far you've
come.

The reason we're surprised is that we underestimate the


cumulative effect of work. Writing a page a day doesn't
sound like much, but if you do it every day you'll write a
book a year. That's the key: consistency. People who do
great things don't get a lot done every day. They get
something done, rather than nothing.

If you do work that compounds, you'll get exponential


growth. Most people who do this do it unconsciously, but
it's worth stopping to think about. Learning, for example,
is an instance of this phenomenon: the more you learn
about something, the easier it is to learn more. Growing
an audience is another: the more fans you have, the more
new fans they'll bring you.

The trouble with exponential growth is that the curve feels


flat in the beginning. It isn't; it's still a wonderful
exponential curve. But we can't grasp that intuitively, so
we underrate exponential growth in its early stages.
Something that grows exponentially can become so
valuable that it's worth making an extraordinary effort to
get it started. But since we underrate exponential growth
early on, this too is mostly done unconsciously: people
push through the initial, unrewarding phase of learning
something new because they know from experience that
learning new things always takes an initial push, or they
grow their audience one fan at a time because they have
nothing better to do. If people consciously realized they
could invest in exponential growth, many more would do
it.

Work doesn't just happen when you're trying to. There's a


kind of undirected thinking you do when walking or taking
a shower or lying in bed that can be very powerful. By
letting your mind wander a little, you'll often solve
problems you were unable to solve by frontal attack.

You have to be working hard in the normal way to benefit


from this phenomenon, though. You can't just walk
around daydreaming. The daydreaming has to be
interleaved with deliberate work that feeds it questions.
[10]

Everyone knows to avoid distractions at work, but it's also


important to avoid them in the other half of the cycle.
When you let your mind wander, it wanders to whatever
you care about most at that moment. So avoid the kind of
distraction that pushes your work out of the top spot, or
you'll waste this valuable type of thinking on the
distraction instead. (Exception: Don't avoid love.)

Consciously cultivate your taste in the work done in your


field. Until you know which is the best and what makes it
so, you don't know what you're aiming for.

And that is what you're aiming for, because if you don't


try to be the best, you won't even be good. This
observation has been made by so many people in so
many different fields that it might be worth thinking about
why it's true. It could be because ambition is a
phenomenon where almost all the error is in one direction
— where almost all the shells that miss the target miss by
falling short. Or it could be because ambition to be the
best is a qualitatively different thing from ambition to be
good. Or maybe being good is simply too vague a
standard. Probably all three are true. [11]

Fortunately there's a kind of economy of scale here.


Though it might seem like you'd be taking on a heavy
burden by trying to be the best, in practice you often end
up net ahead. It's exciting, and also strangely liberating. It
simplifies things. In some ways it's easier to try to be the
best than to try merely to be good.

One way to aim high is to try to make something that


people will care about in a hundred years. Not because
their opinions matter more than your contemporaries', but
because something that still seems good in a hundred
years is more likely to be genuinely good.

Don't try to work in a distinctive style. Just try to do the


best job you can; you won't be able to help doing it in a
distinctive way.

Style is doing things in a distinctive way without trying to.


Trying to is affectation.

Affectation is in effect to pretend that someone other than


you is doing the work. You adopt an impressive but fake
persona, and while you're pleased with the
impressiveness, the fakeness is what shows in the work.
[12]

The temptation to be someone else is greatest for the


young. They often feel like nobodies. But you never need
to worry about that problem, because it's self-solving if
you work on sufficiently ambitious projects. If you succeed
at an ambitious project, you're not a nobody; you're the
person who did it. So just do the work and your identity
will take care of itself.

"Avoid affectation" is a useful rule so far as it goes, but


how would you express this idea positively? How would
you say what to be, instead of what not to be? The best
answer is earnest. If you're earnest you avoid not just
affectation but a whole set of similar vices.
The core of being earnest is being intellectually honest.
We're taught as children to be honest as an unselfish
virtue — as a kind of sacrifice. But in fact it's a source of
power too. To see new ideas, you need an exceptionally
sharp eye for the truth. You're trying to see more truth
than others have seen so far. And how can you have a
sharp eye for the truth if you're intellectually dishonest?

One way to avoid intellectual dishonesty is to maintain a


slight positive pressure in the opposite direction. Be
aggressively willing to admit that you're mistaken. Once
you've admitted you were mistaken about something,
you're free. Till then you have to carry it. [13]

Another more subtle component of earnestness is


informality. Informality is much more important than its
grammatically negative name implies. It's not merely the
absence of something. It means focusing on what matters
instead of what doesn't.

What formality and affectation have in common is that as


well as doing the work, you're trying to seem a certain
way as you're doing it. But any energy that goes into how
you seem comes out of being good. That's one reason
nerds have an advantage in doing great work: they
expend little effort on seeming anything. In fact that's
basically the definition of a nerd.

Nerds have a kind of innocent boldness that's exactly


what you need in doing great work. It's not learned; it's
preserved from childhood. So hold onto it. Be the one
who puts things out there rather than the one who sits
back and offers sophisticated-sounding criticisms of them.
"It's easy to criticize" is true in the most literal sense, and
the route to great work is never easy.

There may be some jobs where it's an advantage to be


cynical and pessimistic, but if you want to do great work
it's an advantage to be optimistic, even though that
means you'll risk looking like a fool sometimes. There's an
old tradition of doing the opposite. The Old Testament
says it's better to keep quiet lest you look like a fool. But
that's advice for seeming smart. If you actually want to
discover new things, it's better to take the risk of telling
people your ideas.

Some people are naturally earnest, and with others it


takes a conscious effort. Either kind of earnestness will
suffice. But I doubt it would be possible to do great work
without being earnest. It's so hard to do even if you are.
You don't have enough margin for error to accommodate
the distortions introduced by being affected, intellectually
dishonest, orthodox, fashionable, or cool. [14]

Great work is consistent not only with who did it, but with
itself. It's usually all of a piece. So if you face a decision in
the middle of working on something, ask which choice is
more consistent.

You may have to throw things away and redo them. You
won't necessarily have to, but you have to be willing to.
And that can take some effort; when there's something
you need to redo, status quo bias and laziness will
combine to keep you in denial about it. To beat this ask: If
I'd already made the change, would I want to revert to
what I have now?

Have the confidence to cut. Don't keep something that


doesn't fit just because you're proud of it, or because it
cost you a lot of effort.

Indeed, in some kinds of work it's good to strip whatever


you're doing to its essence. The result will be more
concentrated; you'll understand it better; and you won't
be able to lie to yourself about whether there's anything
real there.

Mathematical elegance may sound like a mere metaphor,


drawn from the arts. That's what I thought when I first
heard the term "elegant" applied to a proof. But now I
suspect it's conceptually prior — that the main ingredient
in artistic elegance is mathematical elegance. At any rate
it's a useful standard well beyond math.

Elegance can be a long-term bet, though. Laborious


solutions will often have more prestige in the short term.
They cost a lot of effort and they're hard to understand,
both of which impress people, at least temporarily.

Whereas some of the very best work will seem like it took
comparatively little effort, because it was in a sense
already there. It didn't have to be built, just seen. It's a
very good sign when it's hard to say whether you're
creating something or discovering it.

When you're doing work that could be seen as either


creation or discovery, err on the side of discovery. Try
thinking of yourself as a mere conduit through which the
ideas take their natural shape.
(Strangely enough, one exception is the problem of
choosing a problem to work on. This is usually seen as
search, but in the best case it's more like creating
something. In the best case you create the field in the
process of exploring it.)

Similarly, if you're trying to build a powerful tool, make it


gratuitously unrestrictive. A powerful tool almost by
definition will be used in ways you didn't expect, so err on
the side of eliminating restrictions, even if you don't know
what the benefit will be.

Great work will often be tool-like in the sense of being


something others build on. So it's a good sign if you're
creating ideas that others could use, or exposing
questions that others could answer. The best ideas have
implications in many different areas.

If you express your ideas in the most general form, they'll


be truer than you intended.

True by itself is not enough, of course. Great ideas have


to be true and new. And it takes a certain amount of
ability to see new ideas even once you've learned enough
to get to one of the frontiers of knowledge.

In English we give this ability names like originality,


creativity, and imagination. And it seems reasonable to
give it a separate name, because it does seem to some
extent a separate skill. It's possible to have a great deal of
ability in other respects — to have a great deal of what's
often called "technical ability" — and yet not have much
of this.

I've never liked the term "creative process." It seems


misleading. Originality isn't a process, but a habit of mind.
Original thinkers throw off new ideas about whatever they
focus on, like an angle grinder throwing off sparks. They
can't help it.

If the thing they're focused on is something they don't


understand very well, these new ideas might not be good.
One of the most original thinkers I know decided to focus
on dating after he got divorced. He knew roughly as much
about dating as the average 15 year old, and the results
were spectacularly colorful. But to see originality
separated from expertise like that made its nature all the
more clear.
I don't know if it's possible to cultivate originality, but
there are definitely ways to make the most of however
much you have. For example, you're much more likely to
have original ideas when you're working on something.
Original ideas don't come from trying to have original
ideas. They come from trying to build or understand
something slightly too difficult. [15]

Talking or writing about the things you're interested in is a


good way to generate new ideas. When you try to put
ideas into words, a missing idea creates a sort of vacuum
that draws it out of you. Indeed, there's a kind of thinking
that can only be done by writing.

Changing your context can help. If you visit a new place,


you'll often find you have new ideas there. The journey
itself often dislodges them. But you may not have to go
far to get this benefit. Sometimes it's enough just to go
for a walk. [16]

It also helps to travel in topic space. You'll have more new


ideas if you explore lots of different topics, partly because
it gives the angle grinder more surface area to work on,
and partly because analogies are an especially fruitful
source of new ideas.
Don't divide your attention evenly between many topics
though, or you'll spread yourself too thin. You want to
distribute it according to something more like a power
law. [17] Be professionally curious about a few topics and
idly curious about many more.

Curiosity and originality are closely related. Curiosity


feeds originality by giving it new things to work on. But
the relationship is closer than that. Curiosity is itself a kind
of originality; it's roughly to questions what originality is to
answers. And since questions at their best are a big
component of answers, curiosity at its best is a creative
force.

Having new ideas is a strange game, because it usually


consists of seeing things that were right under your nose.
Once you've seen a new idea, it tends to seem obvious.
Why did no one think of this before?

When an idea seems simultaneously novel and obvious,


it's probably a good one.
Seeing something obvious sounds easy. And yet
empirically having new ideas is hard. What's the source of
this apparent contradiction? It's that seeing the new idea
usually requires you to change the way you look at the
world. We see the world through models that both help
and constrain us. When you fix a broken model, new ideas
become obvious. But noticing and fixing a broken model
is hard. That's how new ideas can be both obvious and
yet hard to discover: they're easy to see after you do
something hard.

One way to discover broken models is to be stricter than


other people. Broken models of the world leave a trail of
clues where they bash against reality. Most people don't
want to see these clues. It would be an understatement to
say that they're attached to their current model; it's what
they think in; so they'll tend to ignore the trail of clues left
by its breakage, however conspicuous it may seem in
retrospect.

To find new ideas you have to seize on signs of breakage


instead of looking away. That's what Einstein did. He was
able to see the wild implications of Maxwell's equations
not so much because he was looking for new ideas as
because he was stricter.
The other thing you need is a willingness to break rules.
Paradoxical as it sounds, if you want to fix your model of
the world, it helps to be the sort of person who's
comfortable breaking rules. From the point of view of the
old model, which everyone including you initially shares,
the new model usually breaks at least implicit rules.

Few understand the degree of rule-breaking required,


because new ideas seem much more conservative once
they succeed. They seem perfectly reasonable once
you're using the new model of the world they brought
with them. But they didn't at the time; it took the greater
part of a century for the heliocentric model to be
generally accepted, even among astronomers, because it
felt so wrong.

Indeed, if you think about it, a good new idea has to


seem bad to most people, or someone would have
already explored it. So what you're looking for is ideas
that seem crazy, but the right kind of crazy. How do you
recognize these? You can't with certainty. Often ideas that
seem bad are bad. But ideas that are the right kind of
crazy tend to be exciting; they're rich in implications;
whereas ideas that are merely bad tend to be depressing.
There are two ways to be comfortable breaking rules: to
enjoy breaking them, and to be indifferent to them. I call
these two cases being aggressively and passively
independent-minded.

The aggressively independent-minded are the naughty


ones. Rules don't merely fail to stop them; breaking rules
gives them additional energy. For this sort of person,
delight at the sheer audacity of a project sometimes
supplies enough activation energy to get it started.

The other way to break rules is not to care about them, or


perhaps even to know they exist. This is why novices and
outsiders often make new discoveries; their ignorance of a
field's assumptions acts as a source of temporary passive
independent-mindedness. Aspies also seem to have a
kind of immunity to conventional beliefs. Several I know
say that this helps them to have new ideas.

Strictness plus rule-breaking sounds like a strange


combination. In popular culture they're opposed. But
popular culture has a broken model in this respect. It
implicitly assumes that issues are trivial ones, and in trivial
matters strictness and rule-breaking are opposed. But in
questions that really matter, only rule-breakers can be
truly strict.
An overlooked idea often doesn't lose till the semifinals.
You do see it, subconsciously, but then another part of
your subconscious shoots it down because it would be
too weird, too risky, too much work, too controversial.
This suggests an exciting possibility: if you could turn off
such filters, you could see more new ideas.

One way to do that is to ask what would be good ideas


for someone else to explore. Then your subconscious
won't shoot them down to protect you.

You could also discover overlooked ideas by working in


the other direction: by starting from what's obscuring
them. Every cherished but mistaken principle is
surrounded by a dead zone of valuable ideas that are
unexplored because they contradict it.

Religions are collections of cherished but mistaken


principles. So anything that can be described either
literally or metaphorically as a religion will have valuable
unexplored ideas in its shadow. Copernicus and Darwin
both made discoveries of this type. [18]

What are people in your field religious about, in the sense


of being too attached to some principle that might not be
as self-evident as they think? What becomes possible if
you discard it?

People show much more originality in solving problems


than in deciding which problems to solve. Even the
smartest can be surprisingly conservative when deciding
what to work on. People who'd never dream of being
fashionable in any other way get sucked into working on
fashionable problems.

One reason people are more conservative when choosing


problems than solutions is that problems are bigger bets.
A problem could occupy you for years, while exploring a
solution might only take days. But even so I think most
people are too conservative. They're not merely
responding to risk, but to fashion as well. Unfashionable
problems are undervalued.
One of the most interesting kinds of unfashionable
problem is the problem that people think has been fully
explored, but hasn't. Great work often takes something
that already exists and shows its latent potential. Durer
and Watt both did this. So if you're interested in a field
that others think is tapped out, don't let their skepticism
deter you. People are often wrong about this.

Working on an unfashionable problem can be very


pleasing. There's no hype or hurry. Opportunists and
critics are both occupied elsewhere. The existing work
often has an old-school solidity. And there's a satisfying
sense of economy in cultivating ideas that would
otherwise be wasted.

But the most common type of overlooked problem is not


explicitly unfashionable in the sense of being out of
fashion. It just doesn't seem to matter as much as it
actually does. How do you find these? By being self-
indulgent — by letting your curiosity have its way, and
tuning out, at least temporarily, the little voice in your
head that says you should only be working on
"important" problems.

You do need to work on important problems, but almost


everyone is too conservative about what counts as one.
And if there's an important but overlooked problem in
your neighborhood, it's probably already on your
subconscious radar screen. So try asking yourself: if you
were going to take a break from "serious" work to work
on something just because it would be really interesting,
what would you do? The answer is probably more
important than it seems.

Originality in choosing problems seems to matter even


more than originality in solving them. That's what
distinguishes the people who discover whole new fields.
So what might seem to be merely the initial step —
deciding what to work on — is in a sense the key to the
whole game.

Few grasp this. One of the biggest misconceptions about


new ideas is about the ratio of question to answer in their
composition. People think big ideas are answers, but
often the real insight was in the question.

Part of the reason we underrate questions is the way


they're used in schools. In schools they tend to exist only
briefly before being answered, like unstable particles. But
a really good question can be much more than that. A
really good question is a partial discovery. How do new
species arise? Is the force that makes objects fall to earth
the same as the one that keeps planets in their orbits? By
even asking such questions you were already in excitingly
novel territory.

Unanswered questions can be uncomfortable things to


carry around with you. But the more you're carrying, the
greater the chance of noticing a solution — or perhaps
even more excitingly, noticing that two unanswered
questions are the same.

Sometimes you carry a question for a long time. Great


work often comes from returning to a question you first
noticed years before — in your childhood, even — and
couldn't stop thinking about. People talk a lot about the
importance of keeping your youthful dreams alive, but it's
just as important to keep your youthful questions alive.
[19]

This is one of the places where actual expertise differs


most from the popular picture of it. In the popular picture,
experts are certain. But actually the more puzzled you are,
the better, so long as (a) the things you're puzzled about
matter, and (b) no one else understands them either.

Think about what's happening at the moment just before


a new idea is discovered. Often someone with sufficient
expertise is puzzled about something. Which means that
originality consists partly of puzzlement — of confusion!
You have to be comfortable enough with the world being
full of puzzles that you're willing to see them, but not so
comfortable that you don't want to solve them. [20]

It's a great thing to be rich in unanswered questions. And


this is one of those situations where the rich get richer,
because the best way to acquire new questions is to try
answering existing ones. Questions don't just lead to
answers, but also to more questions.

The best questions grow in the answering. You notice a


thread protruding from the current paradigm and try
pulling on it, and it just gets longer and longer. So don't
require a question to be obviously big before you try
answering it. You can rarely predict that. It's hard enough
even to notice the thread, let alone to predict how much
will unravel if you pull on it.

It's better to be promiscuously curious — to pull a little bit


on a lot of threads, and see what happens. Big things start
small. The initial versions of big things were often just
experiments, or side projects, or talks, which then grew
into something bigger. So start lots of small things.

Being prolific is underrated. The more different things you


try, the greater the chance of discovering something new.
Understand, though, that trying lots of things will mean
trying lots of things that don't work. You can't have a lot
of good ideas without also having a lot of bad ones. [21]

Though it sounds more responsible to begin by studying


everything that's been done before, you'll learn faster and
have more fun by trying stuff. And you'll understand
previous work better when you do look at it. So err on the
side of starting. Which is easier when starting means
starting small; those two ideas fit together like two puzzle
pieces.

How do you get from starting small to doing something


great? By making successive versions. Great things are
almost always made in successive versions. You start with
something small and evolve it, and the final version is
both cleverer and more ambitious than anything you
could have planned.

It's particularly useful to make successive versions when


you're making something for people — to get an initial
version in front of them quickly, and then evolve it based
on their response.

Begin by trying the simplest thing that could possibly


work. Surprisingly often, it does. If it doesn't, this will at
least get you started.

Don't try to cram too much new stuff into any one version.
There are names for doing this with the first version
(taking too long to ship) and the second (the second
system effect), but these are both merely instances of a
more general principle.

An early version of a new project will sometimes be


dismissed as a toy. It's a good sign when people do this.
That means it has everything a new idea needs except
scale, and that tends to follow. [22]

The alternative to starting with something small and


evolving it is to plan in advance what you're going to do.
And planning does usually seem the more responsible
choice. It sounds more organized to say "we're going to
do x and then y and then z" than "we're going to try x
and see what happens." And it is more organized; it just
doesn't work as well.

Planning per se isn't good. It's sometimes necessary, but


it's a necessary evil — a response to unforgiving
conditions. It's something you have to do because you're
working with inflexible media, or because you need to
coordinate the efforts of a lot of people. If you keep
projects small and use flexible media, you don't have to
plan as much, and your designs can evolve instead.

Take as much risk as you can afford. In an efficient market,


risk is proportionate to reward, so don't look for certainty,
but for a bet with high expected value. If you're not failing
occasionally, you're probably being too conservative.

Though conservatism is usually associated with the old,


it's the young who tend to make this mistake.
Inexperience makes them fear risk, but it's when you're
young that you can afford the most.
Even a project that fails can be valuable. In the process of
working on it, you'll have crossed territory few others have
seen, and encountered questions few others have asked.
And there's probably no better source of questions than
the ones you encounter in trying to do something slightly
too hard.

Use the advantages of youth when you have them, and


the advantages of age once you have those. The
advantages of youth are energy, time, optimism, and
freedom. The advantages of age are knowledge,
efficiency, money, and power. With effort you can acquire
some of the latter when young and keep some of the
former when old.

The old also have the advantage of knowing which


advantages they have. The young often have them
without realizing it. The biggest is probably time. The
young have no idea how rich they are in time. The best
way to turn this time to advantage is to use it in slightly
frivolous ways: to learn about something you don't need
to know about, just out of curiosity, or to try building
something just because it would be cool, or to become
freakishly good at something.

That "slightly" is an important qualification. Spend time


lavishly when you're young, but don't simply waste it.
There's a big difference between doing something you
worry might be a waste of time and doing something you
know for sure will be. The former is at least a bet, and
possibly a better one than you think. [23]

The most subtle advantage of youth, or more precisely of


inexperience, is that you're seeing everything with fresh
eyes. When your brain embraces an idea for the first time,
sometimes the two don't fit together perfectly. Usually the
problem is with your brain, but occasionally it's with the
idea. A piece of it sticks out awkwardly and jabs you when
you think about it. People who are used to the idea have
learned to ignore it, but you have the opportunity not to.
[24]

So when you're learning about something for the first


time, pay attention to things that seem wrong or missing.
You'll be tempted to ignore them, since there's a 99%
chance the problem is with you. And you may have to set
aside your misgivings temporarily to keep progressing.
But don't forget about them. When you've gotten further
into the subject, come back and check if they're still there.
If they're still viable in the light of your present
knowledge, they probably represent an undiscovered
idea.

One of the most valuable kinds of knowledge you get


from experience is to know what you don't have to worry
about. The young know all the things that could matter,
but not their relative importance. So they worry equally
about everything, when they should worry much more
about a few things and hardly at all about the rest.

But what you don't know is only half the problem with
inexperience. The other half is what you do know that
ain't so. You arrive at adulthood with your head full of
nonsense — bad habits you've acquired and false things
you've been taught — and you won't be able to do great
work till you clear away at least the nonsense in the way of
whatever type of work you want to do.

Much of the nonsense left in your head is left there by


schools. We're so used to schools that we unconsciously
treat going to school as identical with learning, but in fact
schools have all sorts of strange qualities that warp our
ideas about learning and thinking.

For example, schools induce passivity. Since you were a


small child, there was an authority at the front of the class
telling all of you what you had to learn and then
measuring whether you did. But neither classes nor tests
are intrinsic to learning; they're just artifacts of the way
schools are usually designed.

The sooner you overcome this passivity, the better. If


you're still in school, try thinking of your education as your
project, and your teachers as working for you rather than
vice versa. That may seem a stretch, but it's not merely
some weird thought experiment. It's the truth,
economically, and in the best case it's the truth
intellectually as well. The best teachers don't want to be
your bosses. They'd prefer it if you pushed ahead, using
them as a source of advice, rather than being pulled by
them through the material.

Schools also give you a misleading impression of what


work is like. In school they tell you what the problems are,
and they're almost always soluble using no more than
you've been taught so far. In real life you have to figure
out what the problems are, and you often don't know if
they're soluble at all.

But perhaps the worst thing schools do to you is train you


to win by hacking the test. You can't do great work by
doing that. You can't trick God. So stop looking for that
kind of shortcut. The way to beat the system is to focus on
problems and solutions that others have overlooked, not
to skimp on the work itself.

Don't think of yourself as dependent on some gatekeeper


giving you a "big break." Even if this were true, the best
way to get it would be to focus on doing good work
rather than chasing influential people.

And don't take rejection by committees to heart. The


qualities that impress admissions officers and prize
committees are quite different from those required to do
great work. The decisions of selection committees are
only meaningful to the extent that they're part of a
feedback loop, and very few are.
People new to a field will often copy existing work.
There's nothing inherently bad about that. There's no
better way to learn how something works than by trying
to reproduce it. Nor does copying necessarily make your
work unoriginal. Originality is the presence of new ideas,
not the absence of old ones.

There's a good way to copy and a bad way. If you're


going to copy something, do it openly instead of furtively,
or worse still, unconsciously. This is what's meant by the
famously misattributed phrase "Great artists steal." The
really dangerous kind of copying, the kind that gives
copying a bad name, is the kind that's done without
realizing it, because you're nothing more than a train
running on tracks laid down by someone else. But at the
other extreme, copying can be a sign of superiority rather
than subordination. [25]

In many fields it's almost inevitable that your early work


will be in some sense based on other people's. Projects
rarely arise in a vacuum. They're usually a reaction to
previous work. When you're first starting out, you don't
have any previous work; if you're going to react to
something, it has to be someone else's. Once you're
established, you can react to your own. But while the
former gets called derivative and the latter doesn't,
structurally the two cases are more similar than they seem.

Oddly enough, the very novelty of the most novel ideas


sometimes makes them seem at first to be more
derivative than they are. New discoveries often have to be
conceived initially as variations of existing things, even by
their discoverers, because there isn't yet the conceptual
vocabulary to express them.

There are definitely some dangers to copying, though.


One is that you'll tend to copy old things — things that
were in their day at the frontier of knowledge, but no
longer are.

And when you do copy something, don't copy every


feature of it. Some will make you ridiculous if you do.
Don't copy the manner of an eminent 50 year old
professor if you're 18, for example, or the idiom of a
Renaissance poem hundreds of years later.

Some of the features of things you admire are flaws they


succeeded despite. Indeed, the features that are easiest
to imitate are the most likely to be the flaws.

This is particularly true for behavior. Some talented


people are jerks, and this sometimes makes it seem to the
inexperienced that being a jerk is part of being talented.
It isn't; being talented is merely how they get away with it.

One of the most powerful kinds of copying is to copy


something from one field into another. History is so full of
chance discoveries of this type that it's probably worth
giving chance a hand by deliberately learning about other
kinds of work. You can take ideas from quite distant fields
if you let them be metaphors.

Negative examples can be as inspiring as positive ones. In


fact you can sometimes learn more from things done
badly than from things done well; sometimes it only
becomes clear what's needed when it's missing.

If a lot of the best people in your field are collected in one


place, it's usually a good idea to visit for a while. It will
increase your ambition, and also, by showing you that
these people are human, increase your self-confidence.
[26]

If you're earnest you'll probably get a warmer welcome


than you might expect. Most people who are very good
at something are happy to talk about it with anyone who's
genuinely interested. If they're really good at their work,
then they probably have a hobbyist's interest in it, and
hobbyists always want to talk about their hobbies.

It may take some effort to find the people who are really
good, though. Doing great work has such prestige that in
some places, particularly universities, there's a polite
fiction that everyone is engaged in it. And that is far from
true. People within universities can't say so openly, but
the quality of the work being done in different
departments varies immensely. Some departments have
people doing great work; others have in the past; others
never have.

Seek out the best colleagues. There are a lot of projects


that can't be done alone, and even if you're working on
one that can be, it's good to have other people to
encourage you and to bounce ideas off.

Colleagues don't just affect your work, though; they also


affect you. So work with people you want to become like,
because you will.

Quality is more important than quantity in colleagues. It's


better to have one or two great ones than a building full
of pretty good ones. In fact it's not merely better, but
necessary, judging from history: the degree to which great
work happens in clusters suggests that one's colleagues
often make the difference between doing great work and
not.

How do you know when you have sufficiently good


colleagues? In my experience, when you do, you know.
Which means if you're unsure, you probably don't. But it
may be possible to give a more concrete answer than
that. Here's an attempt: sufficiently good colleagues offer
surprising insights. They can see and do things that you
can't. So if you have a handful of colleagues good enough
to keep you on your toes in this sense, you're probably
over the threshold.
Most of us can benefit from collaborating with colleagues,
but some projects require people on a larger scale, and
starting one of those is not for everyone. If you want to
run a project like that, you'll have to become a manager,
and managing well takes aptitude and interest like any
other kind of work. If you don't have them, there is no
middle path: you must either force yourself to learn
management as a second language, or avoid such
projects. [27]

Husband your morale. It's the basis of everything when


you're working on ambitious projects. You have to nurture
and protect it like a living organism.

Morale starts with your view of life. You're more likely to


do great work if you're an optimist, and more likely to if
you think of yourself as lucky than if you think of yourself
as a victim.

Indeed, work can to some extent protect you from your


problems. If you choose work that's pure, its very
difficulties will serve as a refuge from the difficulties of
everyday life. If this is escapism, it's a very productive
form of it, and one that has been used by some of the
greatest minds in history.

Morale compounds via work: high morale helps you do


good work, which increases your morale and helps you do
even better work. But this cycle also operates in the other
direction: if you're not doing good work, that can
demoralize you and make it even harder to. Since it
matters so much for this cycle to be running in the right
direction, it can be a good idea to switch to easier work
when you're stuck, just so you start to get something
done.

One of the biggest mistakes ambitious people make is to


allow setbacks to destroy their morale all at once, like a
balloon bursting. You can inoculate yourself against this
by explicitly considering setbacks a part of your process.
Solving hard problems always involves some backtracking.

Doing great work is a depth-first search whose root node


is the desire to. So "If at first you don't succeed, try, try
again" isn't quite right. It should be: If at first you don't
succeed, either try again, or backtrack and then try again.

"Never give up" is also not quite right. Obviously there


are times when it's the right choice to eject. A more
precise version would be: Never let setbacks panic you
into backtracking more than you need to. Corollary: Never
abandon the root node.

It's not necessarily a bad sign if work is a struggle, any


more than it's a bad sign to be out of breath while
running. It depends how fast you're running. So learn to
distinguish good pain from bad. Good pain is a sign of
effort; bad pain is a sign of damage.

An audience is a critical component of morale. If you're a


scholar, your audience may be your peers; in the arts, it
may be an audience in the traditional sense. Either way it
doesn't need to be big. The value of an audience doesn't
grow anything like linearly with its size. Which is bad news
if you're famous, but good news if you're just starting out,
because it means a small but dedicated audience can be
enough to sustain you. If a handful of people genuinely
love what you're doing, that's enough.

To the extent you can, avoid letting intermediaries come


between you and your audience. In some types of work
this is inevitable, but it's so liberating to escape it that you
might be better off switching to an adjacent type if that
will let you go direct. [28]

The people you spend time with will also have a big effect
on your morale. You'll find there are some who increase
your energy and others who decrease it, and the effect
someone has is not always what you'd expect. Seek out
the people who increase your energy and avoid those
who decrease it. Though of course if there's someone you
need to take care of, that takes precedence.

Don't marry someone who doesn't understand that you


need to work, or sees your work as competition for your
attention. If you're ambitious, you need to work; it's
almost like a medical condition; so someone who won't
let you work either doesn't understand you, or does and
doesn't care.

Ultimately morale is physical. You think with your body, so


it's important to take care of it. That means exercising
regularly, eating and sleeping well, and avoiding the more
dangerous kinds of drugs. Running and walking are
particularly good forms of exercise because they're good
for thinking. [29]
People who do great work are not necessarily happier
than everyone else, but they're happier than they'd be if
they didn't. In fact, if you're smart and ambitious, it's
dangerous not to be productive. People who are smart
and ambitious but don't achieve much tend to become
bitter.

It's ok to want to impress other people, but choose the


right people. The opinion of people you respect is signal.
Fame, which is the opinion of a much larger group you
might or might not respect, just adds noise.

The prestige of a type of work is at best a trailing


indicator and sometimes completely mistaken. If you do
anything well enough, you'll make it prestigious. So the
question to ask about a type of work is not how much
prestige it has, but how well it could be done.

Competition can be an effective motivator, but don't let it


choose the problem for you; don't let yourself get drawn
into chasing something just because others are. In fact,
don't let competitors make you do anything much more
specific than work harder.

Curiosity is the best guide. Your curiosity never lies, and it


knows more than you do about what's worth paying
attention to.

Notice how often that word has come up. If you asked an
oracle the secret to doing great work and the oracle
replied with a single word, my bet would be on
"curiosity."

That doesn't translate directly to advice. It's not enough


just to be curious, and you can't command curiosity
anyway. But you can nurture it and let it drive you.

Curiosity is the key to all four steps in doing great work: it


will choose the field for you, get you to the frontier, cause
you to notice the gaps in it, and drive you to explore
them. The whole process is a kind of dance with curiosity.
Believe it or not, I tried to make this essay as short as I
could. But its length at least means it acts as a filter. If you
made it this far, you must be interested in doing great
work. And if so you're already further along than you
might realize, because the set of people willing to want to
is small.

The factors in doing great work are factors in the literal,


mathematical sense, and they are: ability, interest, effort,
and luck. Luck by definition you can't do anything about,
so we can ignore that. And we can assume effort, if you
do in fact want to do great work. So the problem boils
down to ability and interest. Can you find a kind of work
where your ability and interest will combine to yield an
explosion of new ideas?

Here there are grounds for optimism. There are so many


different ways to do great work, and even more that are
still undiscovered. Out of all those different types of work,
the one you're most suited for is probably a pretty close
match. Probably a comically close match. It's just a
question of finding it, and how far into it your ability and
interest can take you. And you can only answer that by
trying.

Many more people could try to do great work than do.


What holds them back is a combination of modesty and
fear. It seems presumptuous to try to be Newton or
Shakespeare. It also seems hard; surely if you tried
something like that, you'd fail. Presumably the calculation
is rarely explicit. Few people consciously decide not to try
to do great work. But that's what's going on
subconsciously; they shy away from the question.

So I'm going to pull a sneaky trick on you. Do you want to


do great work, or not? Now you have to decide
consciously. Sorry about that. I wouldn't have done it to a
general audience. But we already know you're interested.

Don't worry about being presumptuous. You don't have


to tell anyone. And if it's too hard and you fail, so what?
Lots of people have worse problems than that. In fact
you'll be lucky if it's the worst problem you have.

Yes, you'll have to work hard. But again, lots of people


have to work hard. And if you're working on something
you find very interesting, which you necessarily will if
you're on the right path, the work will probably feel less
burdensome than a lot of your peers'.
The discoveries are out there, waiting to be made. Why
not by you?

Notes

[1] I don't think you could give a precise definition of what


counts as great work. Doing great work means doing
something important so well that you expand people's
ideas of what's possible. But there's no threshold for
importance. It's a matter of degree, and often hard to
judge at the time anyway. So I'd rather people focused on
developing their interests rather than worrying about
whether they're important or not. Just try to do
something amazing, and leave it to future generations to
say if you succeeded.

[2] A lot of standup comedy is based on noticing


anomalies in everyday life. "Did you ever notice...?" New
ideas come from doing this about nontrivial things. Which
may help explain why people's reaction to a new idea is
often the first half of laughing: Ha!

[3] That second qualifier is critical. If you're excited about


something most authorities discount, but you can't give a
more precise explanation than "they don't get it," then
you're starting to drift into the territory of cranks.

[4] Finding something to work on is not simply a matter of


finding a match between the current version of you and a
list of known problems. You'll often have to coevolve with
the problem. That's why it can sometimes be so hard to
figure out what to work on. The search space is huge. It's
the cartesian product of all possible types of work, both
known and yet to be discovered, and all possible future
versions of you.

There's no way you could search this whole space, so you


have to rely on heuristics to generate promising paths
through it and hope the best matches will be clustered.
Which they will not always be; different types of work
have been collected together as much by accidents of
history as by the intrinsic similarities between them.
[5] There are many reasons curious people are more likely
to do great work, but one of the more subtle is that, by
casting a wide net, they're more likely to find the right
thing to work on in the first place.

[6] It can also be dangerous to make things for an


audience you feel is less sophisticated than you, if that
causes you to talk down to them. You can make a lot of
money doing that, if you do it in a sufficiently cynical way,
but it's not the route to great work. Not that anyone using
this m.o. would care.

[7] This idea I learned from Hardy's A Mathematician's


Apology, which I recommend to anyone ambitious to do
great work, in any field.

[8] Just as we overestimate what we can do in a day and


underestimate what we can do over several years, we
overestimate the damage done by procrastinating for a
day and underestimate the damage done by
procrastinating for several years.

[9] You can't usually get paid for doing exactly what you
want, especially early on. There are two options: get paid
for doing work close to what you want and hope to push
it closer, or get paid for doing something else entirely and
do your own projects on the side. Both can work, but
both have drawbacks: in the first approach your work is
compromised by default, and in the second you have to
fight to get time to do it.

[10] If you set your life up right, it will deliver the focus-
relax cycle automatically. The perfect setup is an office
you work in and that you walk to and from.

[11] There may be some very unworldly people who do


great work without consciously trying to. If you want to
expand this rule to cover that case, it becomes: Don't try
to be anything except the best.

[12] This gets more complicated in work like acting, where


the goal is to adopt a fake persona. But even here it's
possible to be affected. Perhaps the rule in such fields
should be to avoid unintentional affectation.

[13] It's safe to have beliefs that you treat as


unquestionable if and only if they're also unfalsifiable. For
example, it's safe to have the principle that everyone
should be treated equally under the law, because a
sentence with a "should" in it isn't really a statement
about the world and is therefore hard to disprove. And if
there's no evidence that could disprove one of your
principles, there can't be any facts you'd need to ignore in
order to preserve it.

[14] Affectation is easier to cure than intellectual


dishonesty. Affectation is often a shortcoming of the
young that burns off in time, while intellectual dishonesty
is more of a character flaw.

[15] Obviously you don't have to be working at the exact


moment you have the idea, but you'll probably have been
working fairly recently.

[16] Some say psychoactive drugs have a similar effect.


I'm skeptical, but also almost totally ignorant of their
effects.

[17] For example you might give the nth most important
topic (m-1)/m^n of your attention, for some m > 1. You
couldn't allocate your attention so precisely, of course,
but this at least gives an idea of a reasonable distribution.

[18] The principles defining a religion have to be


mistaken. Otherwise anyone might adopt them, and there
would be nothing to distinguish the adherents of the
religion from everyone else.
[19] It might be a good exercise to try writing down a list
of questions you wondered about in your youth. You
might find you're now in a position to do something
about some of them.

[20] The connection between originality and uncertainty


causes a strange phenomenon: because the conventional-
minded are more certain than the independent-minded,
this tends to give them the upper hand in disputes, even
though they're generally stupider.

The best lack all conviction, while the worst


Are full of passionate intensity.

[21] Derived from Linus Pauling's "If you want to have


good ideas, you must have many ideas."

[22] Attacking a project as a "toy" is similar to attacking a


statement as "inappropriate." It means that no more
substantial criticism can be made to stick.

[23] One way to tell whether you're wasting time is to ask


if you're producing or consuming. Writing computer
games is less likely to be a waste of time than playing
them, and playing games where you create something is
less likely to be a waste of time than playing games where
you don't.

[24] Another related advantage is that if you haven't said


anything publicly yet, you won't be biased toward
evidence that supports your earlier conclusions. With
sufficient integrity you could achieve eternal youth in this
respect, but few manage to. For most people, having
previously published opinions has an effect similar to
ideology, just in quantity 1.

[25] In the early 1630s Daniel Mytens made a painting of


Henrietta Maria handing a laurel wreath to Charles I. Van
Dyck then painted his own version to show how much
better he was.

[26] I'm being deliberately vague about what a place is.


As of this writing, being in the same physical place has
advantages that are hard to duplicate, but that could
change.

[27] This is false when the work the other people have to
do is very constrained, as with SETI@home or Bitcoin. It
may be possible to expand the area in which it's false by
defining similarly restricted protocols with more freedom
of action in the nodes.
[28] Corollary: Building something that enables people to
go around intermediaries and engage directly with their
audience is probably a good idea.

[29] It may be helpful always to walk or run the same


route, because that frees attention for thinking. It feels
that way to me, and there is some historical evidence for
it.

Thanks to Trevor Blackwell, Daniel Gackle, Pam Graham,


Tom Howard, Patrick Hsu, Steve Huffman, Jessica
Livingston, Henry Lloyd-Baker, Bob Metcalfe, Ben Miller,
Robert Morris, Michael Neilsen, Courtenay Pipkin, Joris
Poort, Mieke Roos, Rajat Suri, Harj Taggar, Garry Tan, and
my younger son for suggestions and for reading drafts.

You might also like