Fun inversion from Thorndike (1921). The normal angle is: "Why are some people so much better at some things? What are the limits of expertise?" He reframes to: "Why do most people remain so mediocre at things they spend their whole lives doing?"
andymatuschak.org/files/papers/T (p. 178)
Conversation
You can tell he's kind of mad about it (particularly see the following page here). I find this a bit odd. In many of the more mundane cases he cites (e.g. handwriting) it probably is sensible to reach some threshold and just stay there!
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But he also cites decision-making as a common "plateau" skill. That's probably worth improving at for many people! It makes me want to add an entry to his list of possible explanations: it may not be obvious that radical improvement is possible.
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You know what virtuosic pianists sound like, so when you play, you'll naturally compare to those mental recordings (and feel painfully how much improvement is possible)! Military officers are trained to make strategic and decisive decisions, but that’s much less salient!
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OK, Silicon Valley types often read The Art of War etc. Not sure to what extent that approximates officer training!
But if you're a small business owner, I suspect that Decision-Making, as an abstract skill, wouldn’t normally appear on the “skill weightlifting” menu.
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Replying to
Recent Cedric from Commoncog post referenced Agricola, which was a little surprising and then not. It's still only closer, not quite It IMO.
commoncog.com/blog/business-
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I think, for small business owners/operators, the more relevant link is the Permanent Equity checklist I included near the end of the post: permanentequity.com/writings/table
It's really a syllabus for what you need to do to run a business well.


