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The Peter Attia Drive

#96 - David Epstein: How a range of experience leads to better performance in a highly specialized world

The Peter Attia Drive

Peter Attia, MD

Health & Fitness, Medicine, Fitness

4.7 • 7.3K Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2020

⏱️ 157 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, David Epstein, best-selling author of Range and The Sports Gene, discusses the evidence around the most effective ways to improve long-term performance and learning in our specialties, our sports, our careers, and our lives. David makes a compelling case that a range of experiences and skills are more likely to lead to expert performance compared to early specialization, and offers an in-depth critique of the much-publicized 10,000-Hour Rule. David also provides insights into our role as parents in the process of encouraging exposure to many things, the concepts of when to push them, when to give them space, and when to allow them to quit. Furthermore, David goes into many other fascinating topics such as the role of talent, genetics, and practice in reaching expert status, what differentiates a kind vs. wicked learning environment, the importance of “informal training,” and many case studies that suggest strategies for short-term success may not be best for long-term development.

We discuss:

  • A shared interest in Ayrton Senna, and pondering the value in participating in sports [2:30];

  • Examining the 10,000-Hour Rule, and the importance of questioning existing dogma [15:00];

  • How the medical profession is affected by bad science, and the importance of understanding individual variation [28:00];

  • David’s most surprising findings when writing The Sports Gene [35:45];

  • Kind versus wicked learning environments [40:45];

  • How and why strategies for short-term success may not be best for long-term development [47:30];

  • Contrasting the success stories of Tiger Woods and Roger Federer—which path is more common, and an argument for diversified training and experiences [59:15];

  • Is there an age-range or “critical window” during which exposure is necessary to reach a certain level of proficiency or mastery of a skill or knowledge? [1:14:00];

  • How diversifying your interests and unraveling your identity from your speciality could lead to more enjoyment and actually improve performance in your speciality [1:22:15];

  • The undervalued importance of “informal training” [1:29:15];

  • Advice for increasing match quality in your work—where interests and abilities align—to optimize both job performance and fulfillment [1:41:15];

  • Would David want his own son to attend college given the current state of higher education? [1:51:15];

  • The role of a parent—how to encourage sampling, when to push them, when to allow them to quit, and insights from the childhoods of Tiger Woods and Wolfgang Mozart [1:55:45];

  • The need for varied perspectives and the ability to improvise—insights gained from the Space Shuttle Challenger tragedy [2:08:45];

  • How a diversified background and identity could be the difference in life or death—the Hotshot firefighters case study [2:22:15];

  • David’s takeaways from the inspiring story of Frances Hesselbein [2:29:00]; and

  • More.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone, welcome to the Drive Podcast.

0:13.0

I'm your host, Peter Atia.

0:14.8

This podcast, my website, and my weekly newsletter, all focus on the goal of translating

0:18.7

the science of longevity into something accessible for everyone.

0:22.4

Our goal is to provide the best content in health and wellness, full stop, and we've

0:26.6

assembled a great team of analysts to make this happen.

0:29.4

If you enjoy this podcast, we've created a membership program that brings you far more

0:33.2

in-depth content if you want to take your knowledge of the space to the next level.

0:37.2

At the end of this episode, I'll explain what those benefits are, or if you want to learn

0:41.0

more now, head over to peteratiamd.com forward slash subscribe.

0:46.2

Now, without further delay, here's today's episode.

0:49.0

I guess this week is David Epstein.

0:52.4

David is the author of the best selling book of the sports gene, and more recently, range

0:56.6

wide generalist triumph in a specialized world, which ironically makes him a specialist

1:01.9

of generalists.

1:02.9

He was previously a science and investigative reporter at ProPublica, and prior to that,

1:06.6

a senior writer at sports illustrated.

1:09.2

I have followed David's work for some time, have enjoyed his articles, his books, and

1:14.1

reached out to him several months ago, asking to interview him, even though I had already

1:18.5

heard him on a couple of other podcasts that, frankly, I thought they'd a great job,

1:22.0

but I just knew there was more I wanted to explore with him.

1:23.8

Of course, if you've heard David, another podcast, I wouldn't let that discourage you

...

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