1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:02,560 Think Like a Genius: 2 00:00:02,560 --> 00:00:04,400 How to Go Outside the Box, 3 00:00:04,400 --> 00:00:05,760 Analyze Deeply, 4 00:00:05,760 --> 00:00:07,480 Creatively Solve Problems, 5 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:08,920 and Innovate (Mental Models for Better Living Book 5) 6 00:00:08,920 --> 00:00:09,240 Written by 7 00:00:09,240 --> 00:00:10,400 Peter Hollins 8 00:00:10,400 --> 00:00:13,520 Narrated by Russell Newton. 9 00:00:13,520 --> 00:00:28,080 Albert Einstein is the world-renowned German physicist and mathematician who won the Nobel Prize in 1921 for his work on the photoelectric effect. Now considered one of the most influential scientific theorists in history, 10 00:00:28,080 --> 00:00:37,640 Einstein was known for being a deeply inquisitive and curious person. Reportedly Einstein didn’t enjoy school as a child, 11 00:00:37,640 --> 00:00:43,000 but early tutoring experiences sparked his interest in the topic of light. 12 00:00:43,000 --> 00:00:50,640 When Einstein excused himself from military service as a young man and dropped out of school (he preferred independent study), 13 00:00:50,640 --> 00:00:54,040 his parents were worried about his future. Nevertheless, 14 00:00:54,040 --> 00:01:05,040 he was admitted to a prestigious Zurich university because of his excellent performance on the maths and physics entrance exams. After graduating he worked as a patent clerk, 15 00:01:05,040 --> 00:01:08,840 where he privately pursued some of his own ideas. 16 00:01:08,840 --> 00:01:14,280 In 1905 he published four breakthrough papers on the photoelectric effect, 17 00:01:14,280 --> 00:01:19,520 Brownian motion and relativity. Einstein married and had children, 18 00:01:19,520 --> 00:01:21,280 but his marriage was not a happy one, 19 00:01:21,280 --> 00:01:26,160 and he divorced and remarried in 1919. At the time, 20 00:01:26,160 --> 00:01:30,320 Einstein was less known for his theory of relativity than he is today, 21 00:01:30,320 --> 00:01:36,760 and perhaps could not have predicted the full direction his discoveries would take physics in the future (for example, 22 00:01:36,760 --> 00:01:41,720 his work foreshadowing the development of the atomic bomb). 23 00:01:41,720 --> 00:01:42,840 Einstein: 24 00:01:42,840 --> 00:01:45,680 not a one-trick pony 25 00:01:45,680 --> 00:01:48,400 Surprisingly (or perhaps not), 26 00:01:48,400 --> 00:01:56,640 the most notable scientist of the 20th century was also known for taking time out of his research to play the violin. In so doing, 27 00:01:56,640 --> 00:02:00,960 Einstein was engaging in a combination of the “hard” and the “soft” or, 28 00:02:00,960 --> 00:02:02,080 more accurately, 29 00:02:02,080 --> 00:02:06,560 he was exercising skills that required very different mindsets. 30 00:02:06,560 --> 00:02:07,080 Reportedly, 31 00:02:07,080 --> 00:02:09,560 he was even very good at the instrument, 32 00:02:09,560 --> 00:02:15,120 as he was with the piano. But while sawing away on the violin during his breaks, 33 00:02:15,120 --> 00:02:26,280 Einstein actually arrived at some breakthroughs in his research and philosophical questionings. Allegedly one of these musical sessions was the spark for his most famous equation: 34 00:02:26,280 --> 00:02:32,280 E=mc2. Knowing what we do about how true genius sees the world, 35 00:02:32,280 --> 00:02:34,480 this shouldn’t surprise us. 36 00:02:34,480 --> 00:02:53,880 Einstein came up with the term combinatory play to describe the intangible process in which his favorite pastime led to ideas that revolutionized the whole of scientific thought. He explained his reasoning as best he could in 1945 in a letter to French mathematician Jacques S. Hadamard: 37 00:02:53,880 --> 00:02:57,280 “My Dear Colleague: 38 00:02:57,280 --> 00:02:58,480 In the following, 39 00:02:58,480 --> 00:03:13,720 I am trying to answer in brief your questions as well as I am able. I am not satisfied myself with those answers and I am willing to answer more questions if you believe this could be of any advantage for the very interesting and difficult work you have undertaken. 40 00:03:13,720 --> 00:03:16,800 (A) 41 00:03:16,800 --> 00:03:18,640 The words or the language, 42 00:03:18,640 --> 00:03:20,000 as they are written or spoken, 43 00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:34,280 do not seem to play any role in my mechanism of thought. The psychical entities which seem to serve as elements in thought are certain signs and more or less clear images which can be “voluntarily” reproduced and combined. 44 00:03:34,280 --> 00:03:34,640 There is, 45 00:03:34,640 --> 00:03:35,280 of course, 46 00:03:35,280 --> 00:03:53,880 a certain connection between those elements and relevant logical concepts. It is also clear that the desire to arrive finally at logically connected concepts is the emotional basis of this rather vague play with the above-mentioned elements. But taken from a psychological viewpoint, 47 00:03:53,880 --> 00:04:05,440 this combinatory play seems to be the essential feature in productive thought—before there is any connection with logical construction in words or other kinds of signs which can be communicated to others. 48 00:04:05,440 --> 00:04:08,680 (B) 49 00:04:08,680 --> 00:04:10,160 The above-mentioned elements are, 50 00:04:10,160 --> 00:04:10,960 in my case, 51 00:04:10,960 --> 00:04:20,280 of visual and some of muscular type. Conventional words or other signs have to be sought for laboriously only in a secondary stage, 52 00:04:20,280 --> 00:04:25,240 when the mentioned associative play is sufficiently established and can be reproduced at will. 53 00:04:25,240 --> 00:04:28,240 (C) 54 00:04:28,240 --> 00:04:30,080 According to what has been said, 55 00:04:30,080 --> 00:04:35,800 the play with the mentioned elements is aimed to be analogous to certain logical connections one is searching for. 56 00:04:35,800 --> 00:04:39,240 (D) 57 00:04:39,240 --> 00:04:44,680 Visual and motor. In a stage when words intervene at all, 58 00:04:44,680 --> 00:04:45,080 they are, 59 00:04:45,080 --> 00:04:45,800 in my case, 60 00:04:45,800 --> 00:04:47,480 purely auditive, 61 00:04:47,480 --> 00:04:49,880 but they interfere only in a secondary stage, 62 00:04:49,880 --> 00:04:50,720 as already mentioned. 63 00:04:50,720 --> 00:04:53,960 (E) 64 00:04:53,960 --> 00:05:09,320 It seems to me that what you call full consciousness is a limit case which can never be fully accomplished. This seems to be connected with the fact called the narrowness of consciousness (Enge des Bewusstseins).” 65 00:05:09,320 --> 00:05:09,760 Notice, 66 00:05:09,760 --> 00:05:10,240 firstly, 67 00:05:10,240 --> 00:05:14,160 that Einstein has no problem engaging in metacognition, 68 00:05:14,160 --> 00:05:28,800 or thinking about his own thinking and asking questions about his own question-asking. Einstein seemed to believe that indulging in his creative tendencies was helpful for his logical and rational pursuits. That might have been the case, 69 00:05:28,800 --> 00:05:41,440 and it also might have been the case that to engage in a distraction was helpful for taking on different perspectives and viewing problems from different angles. Perhaps it’s related to the so-called Medici effect, 70 00:05:41,440 --> 00:05:46,600 in which the melding of different disciplines will inevitably lead to new discoveries, 71 00:05:46,600 --> 00:05:50,960 and the whole always seems to be greater than the sum of the parts. 72 00:05:50,960 --> 00:05:51,320 Indeed, 73 00:05:51,320 --> 00:05:59,240 combinatory play is not simply the notion that play takes your mind to a different world to regroup. It recognizes, 74 00:05:59,240 --> 00:06:00,320 as Einstein did, 75 00:06:00,320 --> 00:06:11,960 that taking pieces of knowledge and insight from different disciplines and combining them in new contexts is how most creativity truly happens. So as mentioned, 76 00:06:11,960 --> 00:06:19,920 somehow Einstein saw something in playing the violin that helped him think about physics in an entirely new way. 77 00:06:19,920 --> 00:06:27,760 The lesson here is to engage in your own pursuits and not feel constrained by having to stay in similar or adjacent disciplines, 78 00:06:27,760 --> 00:06:34,600 thinking that only they will aid you. There are always parallels between different disciplines, 79 00:06:34,600 --> 00:06:38,680 so find them. More of the same probably will not help; 80 00:06:38,680 --> 00:06:44,240 a dash of something different just might. 81 00:06:44,240 --> 00:06:47,760 The power of the possible 82 00:06:47,760 --> 00:06:50,960 Einstein became well-known for another thinking technique, 83 00:06:50,960 --> 00:06:53,960 and it is one that we use most days in everyday life. 84 00:06:53,960 --> 00:06:57,760 “What if humans were capable of flying?” 85 00:06:57,760 --> 00:07:05,160 “What if the world’s landmasses never broke up into separate continents and instead remained as Pangaea to this day?” 86 00:07:05,160 --> 00:07:21,200 These are hypothetical “what if” questions that tickle your mind into thinking from other perspectives and challenge you to question your premises. Imagining hypotheticals goes beyond simple thinking skills that require only memorization, 87 00:07:21,200 --> 00:07:25,240 description of an observable event or situation, 88 00:07:25,240 --> 00:07:33,200 or even analysis of facts and concrete events. Because hypotheticals pose questions about what isn’t, 89 00:07:33,200 --> 00:07:34,520 what hasn’t happened, 90 00:07:34,520 --> 00:07:37,120 or what isn’t likely to ever happen, 91 00:07:37,120 --> 00:07:48,240 they stretch the imagination in new ways and sharpen creative thinking and practical intelligence. They allow a person to try on different perspectives as though they were lenses, 92 00:07:48,240 --> 00:07:52,680 and suddenly see what was invisible to them before. 93 00:07:52,680 --> 00:07:53,840 For instance, 94 00:07:53,840 --> 00:07:58,320 you’ve likely never considered the implications of human flight because it’s impossible, 95 00:07:58,320 --> 00:08:04,600 so there is a world of thoughts that have remained unexplored. How would traffic lights work, 96 00:08:04,600 --> 00:08:07,360 what kind of licensing process would be required, 97 00:08:07,360 --> 00:08:10,160 would we still have cars and airplanes, 98 00:08:10,160 --> 00:08:13,480 and how would safety work? Now, 99 00:08:13,480 --> 00:08:23,920 how would those rules and laws apply to normal traffic situations in the present day? Think through the realities of how everything would fit together—it’s no small feat! 100 00:08:23,920 --> 00:08:34,680 Einstein in particular was known to explore hypothetical situations taken to the extreme. He called them Gedankenexperiments, 101 00:08:34,680 --> 00:08:37,400 which is German for “thought experiments.” 102 00:08:37,400 --> 00:08:38,560 A thought experiment, 103 00:08:38,560 --> 00:08:39,800 in a more general context, 104 00:08:39,800 --> 00:08:47,560 is essentially playing out a “what if” scenario to its end. It’s acting as if a theory or hypothesis were true, 105 00:08:47,560 --> 00:09:08,720 diving deep into the ramifications and seeing what happens to your “what if” under intense scrutiny. A thought experiment allows you to analyze interesting premises you could never manifest in reality and make new leaps of logic and discovery because you can consider conditions that current knowledge doesn’t yet reach. 106 00:09:08,720 --> 00:09:41,680 Suppose the problem situation is needing to exit a room. The conventional ways to do so are to walk out the door or jump out the window. But what if the door is blocked by a raging fire and the room is on the tenth floor of the building? These conditions have now rendered your conventional solutions fatal. You can only get out of the room either by finding a way to kill that fire or by surviving a fall of several hundred feet. Something in this scenario needs to drastically change its usage or definition, 107 00:09:41,680 --> 00:09:53,280 or it will break entirely. This is the essence of the thought experiment. Suppose this happens. What happens next? And then? And then? 108 00:09:53,280 --> 00:10:00,080 Thought experiments were one of Einstein’s superpowers. He could imagine a scenario, 109 00:10:00,080 --> 00:10:03,720 play it out mentally with shocking accuracy and detail, 110 00:10:03,720 --> 00:10:07,000 and then extract the subtle conclusions that lay within. 111 00:10:07,000 --> 00:10:13,400 One of Einstein’s most famous Gedankenexperiments begins with a simple premise: 112 00:10:13,400 --> 00:10:21,680 what would happen if you chased and then eventually caught up to and rode a beam of light through space? In theory, 113 00:10:21,680 --> 00:10:23,760 once you caught up to the beam of light, 114 00:10:23,760 --> 00:10:32,040 it would appear to be frozen next to you because you are moving at the same speed. Just like if you are walking at the same pace as a car driving next to you, 115 00:10:32,040 --> 00:10:36,040 there is no acceleration (the relative velocities are the same), 116 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:39,200 so the car would seem to be stuck to your side. 117 00:10:39,200 --> 00:10:49,440 The only problem was that this was an impossible proposition at the turn of the century. If you catch up to the light and the light appears to be frozen beside you, 118 00:10:49,440 --> 00:10:53,040 then it is inherently impossible that it is light, 119 00:10:53,040 --> 00:11:03,760 because of the difference in speeds. It ceases to be light at that moment. This means one of the rules of physics was broken or disproved with this elementary thought. 120 00:11:03,760 --> 00:11:05,200 Therefore, 121 00:11:05,200 --> 00:11:09,280 one of the assumptions that underlay physics at the time had to change, 122 00:11:09,280 --> 00:11:21,560 and Einstein realized that the belief in time as a constant had to shift. This discovery directly laid the path for the theory of relativity. The closer you get to the speed of light, 123 00:11:21,560 --> 00:11:26,440 the more time becomes different for you—relative to an outside observer. 124 00:11:26,440 --> 00:11:46,920 This thought experiment allowed Einstein to challenge what were thought to be set-in-stone rules set forth by Isaac Newton’s three laws of energy and matter. This thought experiment was instrumental in realizing that people should question old models and fundamental “rules” instead of trying to conform their theories to them. 125 00:11:46,920 --> 00:11:53,320 The strength of non-conventionality 126 00:11:53,320 --> 00:11:56,760 Let’s return now to the genius traits we mentioned in the previous chapter, 127 00:11:56,760 --> 00:12:00,760 and see how Einstein measures against them. As we saw above, 128 00:12:00,760 --> 00:12:05,280 many of Einstein’s great Eureka moments came from his being a polymath, 129 00:12:05,280 --> 00:12:17,840 or “cross-pollinating” ideas from one area to another (in this case music and physics). It’s probably quite obvious that another of Einstein’s strengths was intellectual curiosity, 130 00:12:17,840 --> 00:12:25,920 lust for learning and insatiable desire to keep asking questions. We can see so much of the lighthearted, 131 00:12:25,920 --> 00:12:29,840 uninhibited child aspect of genius in Einstein, 132 00:12:29,840 --> 00:12:33,560 who literally labeled a technique he used as “play.” 133 00:12:33,560 --> 00:12:38,120 Einstein never set out to win any prizes, 134 00:12:38,120 --> 00:12:43,760 or earn accolades as the best physicist of his generation. That was never his goal. Rather, 135 00:12:43,760 --> 00:12:58,760 he simply wanted to understand. His passion for seeing into the deeper nature of things led him to areas of knowledge that were previously uncharted. We can see how this attitude put him at odds with his more conventional, 136 00:12:58,760 --> 00:13:00,720 pedagogical early school life, 137 00:13:00,720 --> 00:13:10,280 and we can imagine that the young Einstein would not have been much inspired by boring lessons about things that were already well known and established. 138 00:13:10,280 --> 00:13:19,920 We cannot imagine Einstein’s great achievements happening without his enormous sense of curiosity spurring him on. He was not motivated by pride or fame, 139 00:13:19,920 --> 00:13:20,280 either, 140 00:13:20,280 --> 00:13:32,760 since he was known to regularly alienate and offend other scientists and peers and was reportedly quite difficult to work with. Einstein was nothing if not a curious soul, 141 00:13:32,760 --> 00:13:37,320 and it’s this attitude of inquiry that seems to have informed his entire life. 142 00:13:37,320 --> 00:13:51,240 We can see in Einstein’s case that curiosity so often comes with non-conventionality. He was a “draft dodger” and concocted a medical excuse so as not to complete military service, 143 00:13:51,240 --> 00:14:06,080 and was not averse to skipping classes or generally failing to follow school rules. He seemed to have little regard for pre-established hierarchies and preferred to trust his own estimations of what was important and worth doing. And, 144 00:14:06,080 --> 00:14:06,960 this trait, 145 00:14:06,960 --> 00:14:07,360 too, 146 00:14:07,360 --> 00:14:20,360 is at the center of his success. Can you imagine any scientist being credited with completely paradigm-shifting work in the field without breaking the rules of the day? 147 00:14:20,360 --> 00:14:23,680 We know and love Einstein today as a fiercely smart, 148 00:14:23,680 --> 00:14:30,760 independent thinker who greatly advanced the human scientific endeavor. But we need to remember that Einstein was just a man, 149 00:14:30,760 --> 00:14:35,120 who at one time saw his own vision only dimly, 150 00:14:35,120 --> 00:14:52,600 and worked on his pursuits with no guarantee of where they would lead. The one thing that can motivate a person through such a path? Endless curiosity. We can imagine that Einstein would have been fulfilled even if he had never won any awards and died completely unknown. 151 00:14:52,600 --> 00:14:55,680 Summary 152 00:14:55,680 --> 00:15:00,040 • Einstein’s genius traits included curiosity, 153 00:15:00,040 --> 00:15:04,320 having broad areas of interest (i.e. being a polymath), 154 00:15:04,320 --> 00:15:06,920 and a refusal to bow to convention. 155 00:15:06,920 --> 00:15:12,920 • Einstein is known today as one of the 20th century’s most influential scientific thinkers, 156 00:15:12,920 --> 00:15:21,960 and was considered by many to be a genius in both mathematics and physics. He won the Nobel Prize for his work on the photoelectric effect, 157 00:15:21,960 --> 00:15:30,040 but he is best known today for his groundbreaking theory on relativity and his famous E=mc2 equation. 158 00:15:30,040 --> 00:15:35,760 • Einstein coined his own term for the kind of playful, 159 00:15:35,760 --> 00:15:39,840 freeform connections he’d make between different topics and ideas: 160 00:15:39,840 --> 00:15:46,000 combinatorial play. By putting two unrelated ideas together to create something new, 161 00:15:46,000 --> 00:15:48,600 Einstein often solved problems, 162 00:15:48,600 --> 00:15:53,400 came up with creative new ideas or opened new avenues of thoughts to pursue. 163 00:15:53,400 --> 00:16:07,400 • The game of “what if?” is another way to flex the curiosity muscle and bring freshness and novelty to conventional thinking. By running hypothetical situations and thought experiments in his mind, 164 00:16:07,400 --> 00:16:11,320 Einstein satisfied his thirst for learning and understanding, 165 00:16:11,320 --> 00:16:16,000 and accessed new insights that were beyond conventions at the time. 166 00:16:16,000 --> 00:16:21,080 • Einstein was a polymath and had a broad range of interests, 167 00:16:21,080 --> 00:16:25,280 rather than one narrow focus. He played violin and piano, 168 00:16:25,280 --> 00:16:36,280 and had some of his best new ideas during play. This kind of broadmindedness and diversity of interest promotes intellectual agility and wide-ranging, 169 00:16:36,280 --> 00:16:37,600 flexible perspectives. 170 00:16:37,600 --> 00:16:42,760 • Einstein was also non-conventional and worked independently, 171 00:16:42,760 --> 00:16:53,680 regardless of the established rules that surrounded him in early life. This allowed him to engage in truly independent ideas and contribute something entirely different to the field. 172 00:16:53,680 --> 00:17:00,400 • We can see in Einstein’s case that non-linearity of thought, 173 00:17:00,400 --> 00:17:06,440 insatiable curiosity and a wide range of interests were not just helpful to his success, 174 00:17:06,440 --> 00:17:16,760 but essential. We can follow suit by freely engaging in interdisciplinary play and “what if?” games in the areas that grab our intense interest. 175 00:17:16,760 --> 00:17:20,920 • Though conventions may occasionally be useful, 176 00:17:20,920 --> 00:17:24,800 the best territory to explore is that which is uncharted! 177 00:17:24,800 --> 00:17:27,160 • To be more like Einstein, 178 00:17:27,160 --> 00:17:31,840 we can think of ways to break down artificial limits and categories in our own thinking, 179 00:17:31,840 --> 00:17:40,600 and blend concepts and ideas together freely—can you think of a way to combine two of your interests to produce a third, 180 00:17:40,600 --> 00:17:42,040 completely new idea? 181 00:17:42,040 --> 00:17:46,520 This has been 182 00:17:46,520 --> 00:17:48,200 Think Like a Genius: 183 00:17:48,200 --> 00:17:50,240 How to Go Outside the Box, 184 00:17:50,240 --> 00:17:51,520 Analyze Deeply, 185 00:17:51,520 --> 00:17:53,480 Creatively Solve Problems, 186 00:17:53,480 --> 00:17:57,920 and Innovate (Mental Models for Better Living Book 5) 187 00:17:57,920 --> 00:17:59,960 Written by 188 00:17:59,960 --> 00:18:00,880 Peter Hollins 189 00:18:00,880 --> 00:18:06,720 Narrated by Russell Newton.