ISBN-13: 9783565232802 / Angielski / Miękka / 152 str.
We are told to specialize early. Pick a sport, pick a major, grind for 10,000 hours. But in a complex and wicked world, the hyper-specialist is fragile. "Range of Skill" (inspired by David Epstein) argues that the future belongs to the generalist-the person with "range." While experts dig deeper into narrow trenches, generalists connect the dots across fields.We compare the development of Tiger Woods (early specialization) with Roger Federer (late specialization, sampling many sports). The "sampling period" allows for broader skill acquisition and better match quality. Generalists are more creative, more adaptable, and better at solving problems they haven't seen before because they can draw on analogies from other domains.Don't feel guilty for wandering or having diverse interests. Your winding path is not a waste of time; it is your greatest asset. Embrace your breadth. Being a "jack of all trades" is often better than being a master of one useless thing.
Don't be a tool with one function. Be a Swiss Army Knife. Range wins.