Genius: One Percent Inspiration, 99 Percent Grit?
source: http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2009/08/02/the_truth_about_grit/
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Unfortunately, the story of the apple is almost certainly false; Voltaire probably made it up. Even if Newton started thinking about gravity in 1666, it took him years of painstaking work before he understood it. He filled entire vellum notebooks with his scribbles and spent weeks recording the exact movements of a pendulum. (It made, on average, 1,512 ticks per hour.) The discovery of gravity, in other words, wasn’t a flash of insight - it required decades of effort, which is one of the reasons Newton didn’t publish his theory until 1687, in the “Principia.”
Although biographers have long celebrated Newton’s intellect - he also pioneered calculus - it’s clear that his achievements aren’t solely a byproduct of his piercing intelligence. Newton also had an astonishing ability to persist in the face of obstacles, to stick with the same stubborn mystery - why did the apple fall, but the moon remain in the sky? - until he found the answer.
In recent years, psychologists have come up with a term to describe this mental trait: grit. Although the idea itself isn’t new - “Genius is 1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration,” Thomas Edison famously remarked - the researchers are quick to point out that grit isn’t simply about the willingness to work hard. Instead, it’s about setting a specific long-term goal and doing whatever it takes until the goal has been reached. It’s always much easier to give up, but people with grit can keep going.
While stories of grit have long been associated with self-help manuals and life coaches - Samuel Smiles, the author of the influential Victorian text “Self-Help” preached the virtue of perseverance - these new scientific studies rely on new techniques for reliably measuring grit in individuals. As a result, they’re able to compare the relative importance of grit, intelligence, and innate talent when it comes to determining lifetime achievement. Although this field of study is only a few years old, it’s already made important progress toward identifying the mental traits that allow some people to accomplish their goals, while others struggle and quit. Grit, it turns out, is an essential (and often overlooked) component of success."
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A little money - allows the freedom.
No money, no time to create and make real.
You could have 2000 inventions that each would change the world - some cheap - but no money, no inventions.
Or you can give them away. Then, while you're holding your shaking hands over the burn-barrel under the over-pass, to keep warm, someone will ask them at their champagne gala what your name was and they'll say, "Who?"
- 2 years ago
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pjacobs51
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I think in most cases "grit" may need an outside power source. Such as proving your point (in your face,you), or money motivation, or achieving a status of "greatness" in your field.
But other cases may just be a mere obsession, like those people who have to finish that crossword puzzle no matter what, but on a grander scale like Newton's it would take most of your life's work.
- 2 years ago
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pjacobs51
