know of any work applying ergodicity to innovation? As in, if 1 in a 100 wild ideas (in some broad sense) will pay off in 1 year, then 1 wild idea might pay off for sure if the bunnytrail is pursued for 100 years...
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(I believe this to be true btw... almost any wild idea, if pursued for long enough in a sufficiently open-ended way, will eventually get somewhere new and interesting)
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Actually it could go either fox or hedgehog or what calls turtles. The key is to stay in a compounding interest epistemic bunnytrail for long enough, not the cognitive style.
Fox = make 100 pots
Hedgehog = make the best pot
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I think is on to something here. The key to being an effective hedgehog (vs cactus) is the open-ended way that the hedgehog pursues the singular wild idea. The key to being an effective fox is not volume of ideas, but skillful curation of ideas.
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And this assumes ergodicity. Only ergodic challenges can be met by either a fox or a hedgehog. If non-ergotic, it is probably better suited to one or the other.
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Tagging the right Joe Edelman this time and untagging the wrong one. I think Joe's turtle archetype refactors the right bits of fox and hedgehog into one actually notion.so/Turtleocracy-4 so you could say we're talking 2 flavors of turtle
I think of hedgehogs over long time horizons as people with a pet theory for which they seek confirmation/disconfirmation over time, with a scientific mindset of quality dependent on talent ranging from crackpot to effective. INTJs trying to build a theory of everything for eg
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Foxes over a long horizon otoh are more like training a pattern recognition for long-term patterns, placing small bets along the way, and doubling down on the ones that pay off.
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