SearchingforPeace
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http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2016/05/why-americans-ignore-the-role-of-luck-in-everything.html
Very interesting. I always have seen the importance of luck or chance in life. While some would like to discount those who talk of luck as sour grapes or envy, it is obvious to any one who backs away from dogma and looks at events and society.
Malcolm Gladwell highlights certain events and situstions external to the individual determine success in his book Outliers.
But back to the article.
The article goes on to discuss why the Mona Lisa and Bryan Cranston are examples of luck, as well why the lucky ones hate being told they are lucky, as well as a possible way to talk to lucky folk about luck without them getting defensive.
Read the whole.
Very interesting. I always have seen the importance of luck or chance in life. While some would like to discount those who talk of luck as sour grapes or envy, it is obvious to any one who backs away from dogma and looks at events and society.
Malcolm Gladwell highlights certain events and situstions external to the individual determine success in his book Outliers.
But back to the article.
In it, Frank had argued that, “Contrary to what many parents tell their children, talent and hard work are neither necessary nor sufficient for economic success.†The missing ingredient, he explained in an argument he would eventually expand upon in his new book Success and Luck: Good Fortune and the Myth of Meritocracy, is luck.
.....
Varney, like many people who get upset by Frank’s argument, ignored a full half of it: Frank does think hard work, and merit more broadly, play important roles in determining success. Most successful people worked very hard to get there, and indeed are quite talented. But merit and hard work aren’t enough — because there are so many people who are smart and hardworking, but only so many “slots†for the best jobs, for most successful artistic endeavors, and so on, luck invariably plays an important role.
....
Because people have such an unbalanced view of the luck-versus-skill equation, they fail to understand that there is good reason to have programs that can help redress some of the imbalances that arise in such a luck-oriented world.
....
The article goes on to discuss why the Mona Lisa and Bryan Cranston are examples of luck, as well why the lucky ones hate being told they are lucky, as well as a possible way to talk to lucky folk about luck without them getting defensive.
Read the whole.