Ask HN: Are you a polymath? know of one?
For most people, it is hard enough to get good in one topic in our lifetime. Even harder to become a total expert.
To do this in multiple disciplines is incredible. I am fascinated by such people.
To do this in multiple disciplines is incredible. I am fascinated by such people.
8 comments
[ 1.5 ms ] story [ 32.9 ms ] threadToday it seems impossible. Though, with the right head start of a highly privileged birth, perfect timing of the right mentors, winning the genetic lottery, and other uncountable factors, you might get one or two a century. Of course, depending on the breadth of your definition.
Maybe it's not quite what you mean, but at a small company I think you find a lot of people that while maybe not polymaths are very broad in their skillset.
My answer is simple: the world of computers is an endless one, a gigantic rabbit-hole (especially when combined with The Internet). Being able to download source code for a broad number of programs and have them run and configured any way you wish is still magical, no matter how many times I've tried it.
Then there's the fact that you can get reliable information on an endless amount of subjects with very little friction or red tape. I am still in awe of The Internet and haven't become jaded about it yet, as many of my peers have (they literally have grown bored of the net...something I can't understand). I guess it's how you apply the knowledge instead of merely knowing for the sake of knowing.