Rise of the Expert Generalist

Enjoyed this profile of Charlie Munger on Medium, especially the description of the Expert Generalist, a rival to the 10,000 hour specialist:

The Rise Of The Expert-Generalist

The rival argument to the 10,000 hour rule is the expert-generalist approach. Orit Gadiesh, chairman of Bain & Co, who coined the term, describes the expert-generalist as:

“Someone who has the ability and curiosity to master and collect expertise in many different disciplines, industries, skills, capabilities, countries, and topics., etc. He or she can then, without necessarily even realizing it, but often by design:

  1. Draw on that palette of diverse knowledge to recognize patterns and connect the dots across multiple areas.
  2. Drill deep to focus and perfect the thinking.”

The concept is commonly represented by this model of the “T-shaped individual”:

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Three great books on Moral Philosophy and Ethics

These three books go brilliantly together. Here is the order I read them in. The images link to Amazon.com kindle editions.

The_Righteous_Mind__Why_Good_People_Are_Divided_by_Politics_and_Religion_-_Kindle_edition_by_Jonathan_Haidt__Politics___Social_Sciences_Kindle_eBooks___Amazon_com_
The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Haidt

Amazon_com__Moral_Tribes__Emotion__Reason__and_the_Gap_Between_Us_and_Them__9781594202605___Joshua_Greene__Books
Moral Tribes by Joshua Greene

The_Quest_for_a_Moral_Compass__A_Global_History_of_Ethics__Kenan_Malik__9781612194035__Amazon_com__Books
The Quest for a Moral Compass by Kenan Malik