Robert Greene

Mastery

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  • Данил Мочаловhas quoted4 years ago
    Galton was a boy wonder who went on to have an illustrious scientific career, but he never quite mastered any of the fields he went into. He was notoriously restless, as is often the case with child prodigies.
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted4 months ago
    The longer they spent observing something, the deeper their understanding and connection to reality. With experience, their hunting skills would progress. With continued practice, their ability to make effective tools would improve. The body could decay but the mind would continue to learn and adapt. Using time for such effect is the essential ingredient of mastery.
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted4 months ago
    This power of the mind could be unleashed only after years of experience. Having mastered a particular skill—tracking prey, fashioning a tool—it was now automatic, and so while practicing the skill the mind no longer had to focus on the specific actions involved but instead could concentrate on something higher—what the prey might be thinking, how the tool could be felt as part of the hand. This thinking inside would be a preverbal version of third-level intelligence—the primitive equivalent of Leonardo da Vinci’s intuitive feel for anatomy and landscape or Michael Faraday’s for electromagnetism. Mastery at this level meant our ancestors could make decisions rapidly and effectively, having gained a complete understanding of their environment and their prey. If this power had not evolved, the minds of our ancestors would have become easily overwhelmed by the mass of information they had to process for a successful hunt.
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted5 months ago
    emergence of the conscious, reasoning mind
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted5 months ago
    emergence of the conscious, reasoning mind
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted5 months ago
    The human visual system is not built for scanning, as a cow’s is, but for depth of focus.
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted5 months ago
    Tree-living primates evolved this vision for a different purpose—to navigate branches, and to spot fruits, berries, and insects with greater effectiveness. They also evolved elaborate color vision.
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted5 months ago
    emphasis in magic on deep focus.
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted5 months ago
    Intuitive powers at the mastery level are a mix of the instinctive and the rational, the conscious and the unconscious, the human and the animal. It is our way of making sudden and powerful connections to the environment, to feeling or thinking inside things. As children we had some of this intuitive power and spontaneity, but it is generally drummed out of us by all of the information that overloads our minds over time. Masters return to this childlike state, their works displaying degrees of spontaneity and access to the unconscious, but at a much higher level than the child.
  • Maksim Ilchenkohas quoted6 months ago
    That is why the artwork of Masters touches us to the core; the artist has captured something of the essence of reality. That is why the brilliant scientist can uncover a new law of physics, and the inventor or entrepreneur can hit upon something no one else has imagined.
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