What Is Luck and What Is Not
The Daily Stoic3 Okt 2019

What Is Luck and What Is Not

The philosopher and writer Nassim Taleb once said that, “Hard work will get you a professorship or a BMW. You need both work and luck for a Booker, a Nobel, or a private jet.” His point was that certain accomplishments are within the reasonable grasp of someone making incremental gains each day. Outsized success and outlier accomplishments require that and extreme luck or timing.

This is worth considering for all of us who grew up being told the world was a meritocracy. Of course, it isn’t. Plenty of brilliant people fail to succeed for all sorts of reasons, and plenty of not-so-brilliant people find themselves successful beyond their wildest dreams. The world is a random, even cruel, place that does not always reward merit or hard work or skill. Sometimes it does, but not always.

Still, perhaps a more usable and practical distinction to make is not between hard work and luck, but between what is up to us and what is not up to us. This is the distinction that the Stoics tried to make and to think about always. Pioneering new research in science—that’s up to us. Being recognized for that work (e.g. winning a Nobel) is not. A committee decides that. The media decides that. Becoming an expert in a field, that’s up to us. We do that by reading, by studying, by going out and experiencing things. Being hired as a professor at Harvard to teach that expertise is not (think of all the people who weren’t hired there over the years because they were female, or Jewish, or Black). Writing a prize-worthy piece of literature—up to us. That’s time in front of the keyboard. That’s up to our genius. Being named as a finalist for the Booker Prize is not.

It’s not that luck, exactly, decides these things, but it is very clearly other people that make the decision. Marcus Aurelius said that the key to life was to tie our sanity—our sense of satisfaction—to our own actions. To tie it to what other people say or do (that was his definition of ambition) was to set ourselves up to be hurt and disappointed. It’s insanity. And it misses the point.

Do the work. Be happy with that. Everything else is irrelevant.

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Avsnitt(2857)

Tom Segura On Career, Comedy, And Craziness

Tom Segura On Career, Comedy, And Craziness

Ryan speaks with Tom Segura in the second of a two-part conversation about the changing landscape of stand-up comedy, the philosophical mindset that he brings to his work, how he manages his media die...

11 Okt 202350min

No One Has The Time For This |14 Choices A Stoic Should Make Every Day

No One Has The Time For This |14 Choices A Stoic Should Make Every Day

“What would you do if you found out you were diagnosed with a terminal illness?”We’ve all mulled this hypothetical question over at one point or another. Then we go back to our normal lives as if life...

10 Okt 202317min

It’s Counting Down For Each Of Us | Practice Love

It’s Counting Down For Each Of Us | Practice Love

It may have been a hard couple weeks. It may have been a hard couple years. It may have been a tough decade–like the one that Marcus Aurelius had, complete with plagues and floods and betrayals and he...

9 Okt 20235min

Embracing Alive Time And Stoic Wisdom with Arnold Schwarzenegger And Robert Greene

Embracing Alive Time And Stoic Wisdom with Arnold Schwarzenegger And Robert Greene

In this Sunday episode of The Daily Stoic, Ryan Holiday takes us on an exhilarating journey through a weekend filled with preparation, family time and embracing what the Stoics call "alive time." Afte...

8 Okt 202318min

Tom Segura On Honing The Craft of Comedy

Tom Segura On Honing The Craft of Comedy

Ryan speaks with Tom Segura in the first of a two-part conversation about the links between writing comedy specials and writing philosophy books, the mindset it takes to succeed in a creative field, T...

7 Okt 202358min

When You Don’t Like What You See | Looking Out For Each Other

When You Don’t Like What You See | Looking Out For Each Other

Marcus Aurelius, like all of us, would catch glimpses of himself in the mirror. As we talked about recently, Marcus would have checked himself in the mirror in the morning, he would have seen his refl...

6 Okt 20237min

The Beautiful Language Of Marcus’s Philosophy | Ask DS

The Beautiful Language Of Marcus’s Philosophy | Ask DS

There are so many beautiful passages in Meditations.“The way loaves of bread split open on top in the oven,” Marcus Aurelius writes in Book 3, “the ridges are just by-products of the baking, and yet p...

5 Okt 202312min

Nate Boyer On Developing Perseverance And Asking For Help

Nate Boyer On Developing Perseverance And Asking For Help

Ryan speaks with Nate Boyer in the second of a two-part interview about why his new movie is aligned with the Stoic ideal of encouraging people to ask for help, the moment from basic training that mad...

4 Okt 20231h 19min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
uppgang-och-fall
svd-tech-brief
bathina-en-podcast
avanzapodden
rss-borsens-finest
borsmorgon
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
kvalitetsaktiepodden
lastbilspodden
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
fill-or-kill
rss-dagen-med-di
tabberaset
dynastin