How Elon Musk Learns Faster and Better Than Everyone Else
How Elon Musk Learns Faster and Better Than Everyone Else
How Elon Musk Learns Faster and Better Than Everyone Else
To explain Musk’s success, others have pointed to his heroic work ethic
(he regularly works 85-hour weeks), his ability to set reality-distorting
visions for the future, and his incredible resilience.
But all of these felt unsatisfactory to me. Plenty of people have these
traits. I wanted to know what he did di erently.
• Follow the 5-hour rule and put at least 5 hours per week into
learning.
For example, if you’re in the tech industry and everyone else is just
reading tech publications, but you also know a lot about biology, you
have the ability to come up with ideas that almost no one else could.
Vice-versa. If you’re in biology, but you you also understand arti cial
intelligence, you have an information advantage over everyone else
who stays siloed.
Despite this basic insight, few people actually learn beyond their
industry.
Each new eld we learn that is unfamiliar to others in our eld gives us
the ability to make combinations that they can’t. This is the modern
polymath advantage.
One fascinating study echoes this insight. It examined how the top 59
opera composers of the 20th century mastered their craft. Counter to
the conventional narrative that success of top performers can solely be
explained by deliberate practice and specialization, the researcher
Dean Keith Simonton found the exact opposite: “The compositions of
the most successful operatic composers tended to represent a mix of
genres…composers were able to avoid the in exibility of too much
expertise(overtraining) by cross-training,”summarizes UPENN
researcher Scott Barry Kaufman in a Scienti c American article.
Elon Musk is also good at a very speci c type of learning that most
others aren’t even aware of — learning transfer.
This is where Musk shines. Several of his interviews show that he has a
unique two-step process for fostering learning transfer.
Here’s how the deconstruction process works: Let’s say you want to
deconstruct the letter “A” and understand the deeper principle of what
makes an “A” an A. Let’s further say that you have two approaches you
could use to do this:
Each di erent A in Approach #1 gives more insight into what stays the
same and what di ers between each A. On the other hand, each A in
Approach #2 gives us no insight.
What does this mean in our day-to-day life? When we’re jumping into a
new eld, we shouldn’t just take one approach or best practice. We
should explore lots of di erent approaches, deconstruct each one, and
then compare and contrast them. This will help us uncover underlying
principles.
Next, he reconstructs the fundamental
principles in new elds
Step two of Musk’s learning transfer process involves reconstructing the
foundational principles he’s learned in arti cial intelligence,
technology, physics, and engineering into separate elds:
At the deepest level, what we can learn from Elon Musk’s story is that
we shouldn’t accept the dogma that specialization is the best or only
path toward career success and impact. Legendary expert-generalist
Buckminster Fuller summarizes a shift in thinking we should all
consider. He shared it decades ago, but it’s just as relevant today:
“We are in an age that assumes that the narrowing trends of specialization
to be logical, natural, and desirable… In the meantime, humanity has
been deprived of comprehensive understanding. Specialization has bred
feelings of isolation, futility, and confusion in individuals. It has also
resulted in the individual’s leaving responsibility for thinking and social
action to others.Specialization breeds biases that ultimately aggregate as
international and ideological discord, which in turn leads to war.”
At the most practical level, what we can learn from Elon Musk is the
modern polymath formula: