
347: Steven Strogatz - How Calculus Reveals The Secrets Of The Universe
from The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
by Ryan Hawk
Published: Mon Jan 13 2020
Show Notes
The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
Text LEARNERS to 44222
Full show notes can be found at www.LearningLeader.com
Episode #347: Steven Strogatz - How Calculus Reveals The Secrets Of The Universe
- Leaders who sustain excellence: 
- Have a willingness to be a beginner 
- "When you're naive, you ask new questions"
 
 - "They have the courage to be someone who's just starting"
 - How do you fight the urge to live up to a prior reputation of being an expert at something? 
- Be known as an adventurer. Cannot have an ego.
 
 
 - Have a willingness to be a beginner 
 - Six degrees of separation is a math problem
 - The strength in weak ties 
- It's important to connect with people outside of your typical orbit
 - Action: Go to a strange party, play a new sport, go to a new gym, meet oddballs 
- Collect "casual acquaintances"
 
 
 - The value of being a helper: 
- Be the assist person, help others, do little acts of kindness, promote someone else's work
 
 - How Steven and I got to know each other: 
- David Epstein's wife made an intro for David and Steven... And then from David to me. 
- "Be the kind of person who remembers others names"
 
 
 - David Epstein's wife made an intro for David and Steven... And then from David to me. 
 - Why should a normal person learn calculus? 
- "The world has been turned upside down by calculus"
 - "Calculus is the mathematical study of change"
 - "It's a great intellectual adventure story"
 - "Calculus is the language that God talks" --> The laws of nature are built in calculus
 
 - How to be more creative? 
- Be broadly interested in many different topics. Take something from one area and apply it somewhere else.
 
 - Advice Steven would give to a mid-level manager: 
- "Getting high grades is jumping through hoops someone else sets"
 - "As a PhD, you have to make your own hoops"
 - "People need to be more adventurous, and then figure it out"
 
 - Why you should study Improv as a leader: 
- Use "Yes and..." This helps with brainstorming and coming up with new ideas. Put out a lot of wacky ideas to get to the good stuff.
 - "I want people to be gripped irrationally by the imagination"
 
 - The power of mentors: 
- "Learn from both the great coaches and the bad ones"
 
 - The value of friendships: 
- The story of Mr. Joffray -- Physically impressive and wonderfully intelligent. He took pleasure in Steven passing him.
 
 - The value of teaching: 
- It helps create empathy... It forces you to put yourself in the mind of someone else. "Bad teachers don't have empathy."
 
 - How does Steven prepare for big moments? 
- "I try to be myself. And talk myself out of being intimidated." ---> The audience wants you to do well.
 
 - Life advice: 
- "Do what you care about most, what drives you the most, do the hard work to become skillful."
 - Why joining The Learning Leader Circle is a good idea