Podcst
323: Ian Leslie - The Desire To Know & Why Your Future Depends On It by Ryan Hawk

323: Ian Leslie - The Desire To Know & Why Your Future Depends On It

from The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

by Ryan Hawk

Published: Sun Aug 11 2019

Show Notes

The Learning Leader Show with Ryan Hawk

Full show notes can be found at www.LearningLeader.com

Text LEARNERS to 44222

#322: Ian Leslie

Ian Leslie is a London-based journalist and author of critically acclaimed books about human behavior. He is currently writing a new book on “productive disagreement”, which will be published in 2020.Ian also created, wrote and performed in the BBC radio comedy Before They Were Famous.

Notes:

  • Leaders who sustain excellence =
    • Have the ability to think about their own thinking -- Step outside and reflect
    • Know that you'll say "I don't know" frequently
    • Breadth -- A range of interests
    • Interested in building knowledge and an awareness that it might not pay off (and being ok with that)
  • Ian built his life around curiosity -- He was a strategist for ad agencies. He needed to deeply understand his clients. That is a job built on curiosity.
    • "I am a curiosity driven writer."
  • Children are born curious... "People are born with habits/knowledge to survive." And then they stop. There's no evolutionary impulse to keep going.
    • It becomes a conscious choice to cognitive resources and time
  • The two types of curiosity
    • Diversive: Hunger for new information. It comes from an information gap. Agatha Christie understands how to create an information gap to keep you turning the page
    • Epistemic: Desire to acquire knowledge/build/assimilate into networks in your brain. It requires discipline. It's engendered. It's diversive curiosity grown up.
  • "There is a rising premium on people with a high need for cognition." NFC (need for cognition) is a scientific measure of intellectual curiosity
  • "Taking action. Doing... is a form of learning. They are intertwined."
  • Reflecting on own habits -- use self as a lab experiment... Then talk with others.
  • Empathically curious -- Being curious about what's inside of other person's head. How they think and feel.
  • "You're going to be come a better communicator being a better listener."
  • Atul Gawande -- Ask the unscripted question. Make a human connection.
  • Have 10% of your brain switched on to "Am I talking too much?"
  • How to have productive disagreements:
    • Don't avoid it
    • Have disagreements we both can live with
    • "You'll have more productive disagreement if you're curious about the other person."
  • People who have a higher level of scientific curiosity... They don't rush to judgement. Think, "Oh, I wonder why I think that?"
  • "Nobody has trained us in how to disagree with each other."
  • "You have this choice in judgement and curiosity."
  • Life/Career advice: "Be interested in everything. Go deep in one area."
    • Have core people in your life and foster the weak ties.
  • Everyone is born curious. But only some retain the habits of exploring, learning and discovering as they grow older. Which side of the “curiosity divide” are you on?