How To Study Hard - Richard Feynman

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • “Study hard what interests you the most in the most undisciplined, irreverent and original manner possible. - Richard Feynman
    Interviews in order of appearance:
    Richard Feynman
    • The complete FUN TO IM...
    John Carmack
    • John Carmack: Doom, Qu...
    Kevin Systrom
    • Kevin Systrom: Instagr...
    Andrej Karpathy
    • Andrej Karpathy: Tesla...
    background music:
    Sid Acharya - Faliing Through the Hourglass
    • Falling Through the Ho...

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @peeper2070
    @peeper2070 Год назад +4093

    Came for Feynman and got tricked into a podcast. Clearly I’m not smart.

    • @BigDickMark
      @BigDickMark Год назад +43

      Same. 😑

    • @mr.ben-dover7249
      @mr.ben-dover7249 Год назад +74

      Atleast you are self aware =)

    • @BigDickMark
      @BigDickMark Год назад +21

      @@mr.ben-dover7249 Thanks, Officer Dover of the Comment Police.

    • @memoriesofdaysgoneby2348
      @memoriesofdaysgoneby2348 Год назад

      This deceptive, duplicitous bait-and-switch is why people no longer trust scientists any more. Mistitling written and video data elements has evolved to a very high level at the same time citizen IQs are lowering. This is no coincidence. Dr. Fauci is prime example.

    • @danielbrantley6158
      @danielbrantley6158 Год назад +3

      Seriously

  • @troubledouble106
    @troubledouble106 Год назад +7881

    As a wise man once said "Talent can get you far, but hard work can get you anywhere."

    • @Ishar___X
      @Ishar___X Год назад +49

      Yeah i would want to see that man find whether γ is rational or irrational or prove or disprove the Riemann hypothesis with "just hard work".

    • @errebusaether
      @errebusaether Год назад

      @@Ishar___X I know of someone that managed to solve mathematical problems that has stumped mathematicians for a long time without even knowing he did. The dude did it all with hard work from his childhood years of studying geometry. He didn’t have the talent or is a genius, but nonetheless, his a brilliant mind for his long journey in studying.
      And if you’re curious, his name is George Dantzig.

    • @octavioavila6548
      @octavioavila6548 Год назад +14

      Incorrect

    • @octavioavila6548
      @octavioavila6548 Год назад +56

      Intelligence will always gets you farther than hard work. Hard work has minimal influence on success. Talent is the most influential factor

    • @errebusaether
      @errebusaether Год назад

      @@octavioavila6548 We know that isn’t true.
      Everyone has IQ and it increases through experience and studying (a lot more ways than you can imagine). Hard work is essential of making our neurons more pathways throughout the brain which greatly improves cognitive functions. But of course, intelligence and EQ on how you find answers is indeed important, but without hard work it is pointless if there is no long-term action (hard work is accompanied with discipline) because improvement requires different experiences and knowledges. ‘Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.’ -Albert Einstein
      You have to work hard first because talent isn’t everything.
      Edit: My correction to your sentence would be, Hard work will always get you farther than talent. My mother who is great at math and is able to understand Calculus easily had difficulties with advanced topics which means you need more than just talent. And I who had terrible talent and no passion for math took me a while to complete my study, but I got better at understanding advanced topics due to the basics I’ve built up.
      (But I do agree that intelligence will definitely get you farther. But IQ isn’t simple, it can be improved through constant practice, discipline, and studying. Hard work is the process of increasing your IQ.)

  • @lorenzomizushal3980
    @lorenzomizushal3980 Год назад +10112

    I read in his biography that when he was a teenager he studied so hard that he was sick for days. I don't think ordinary people can study that hard.

    • @al7bndgsh706
      @al7bndgsh706 Год назад +486

      @@sudheeshsingh6856if you’re not the top5 student, you should seek a more efficient studying method since it is easy to study less efficiently.

    • @birdbeakbeardneck3617
      @birdbeakbeardneck3617 Год назад +303

      Some chinese people have heart attacks

    • @sakshipriyadarshini3264
      @sakshipriyadarshini3264 Год назад +379

      @@birdbeakbeardneck3617 asians in general

    • @LeChercheurDeVie
      @LeChercheurDeVie Год назад +58

      Name of the biography Book please

    • @lorenzomizushal3980
      @lorenzomizushal3980 Год назад

      @@LeChercheurDeVie Genius by James Gleick

  •  Год назад +4010

    Great advice: don't compare yourself with others, but rather with who you were some time ago. If you see others doing better than you, admire and learn from them. Then, strive to improve.

    • @thefirstuwu8874
      @thefirstuwu8874 Год назад +11

      It is literally in the video

    • @Blank-ds5ox
      @Blank-ds5ox Год назад +43

      >admire and learn from them
      This is difficult to actually carry out in the real world, especially since narcissism culture is pushed so hard these days. Almost everyone on some level is trapped in the loop of comparison, and when you're in it you don't even realize it's happening, but your actions are completely motivated by fear.

    • @LadderVictims
      @LadderVictims Год назад +4

      ​@@Blank-ds5oxthis was really insightful

    • @araobalate
      @araobalate Год назад +5

      I used to enjoy studying but not anymore, maybe stuff were just simple and now they got harder and I don't like harder

    • @LadderVictims
      @LadderVictims Год назад +1

      @@araobalate and that's where you get paid more, for learning and doing thre hard stuff

  • @Yossef_M
    @Yossef_M Год назад +1111

    to study hard:
    1. stop procrasitnating and actually study

    • @basicthingsbutrareanswered
      @basicthingsbutrareanswered 3 месяца назад +13

      yeah its our problem

    • @von.changfeng
      @von.changfeng 2 месяца назад +19

      I will leave this comment so I can come back to it, let's focus and put in the time and effort boys. We got this

    • @blaxx6662
      @blaxx6662 Месяц назад +4

      ​@von.changfeng we got this, I'll start working hard as of today, in 5 months I'll be entering mechatronics project competitions, and I will start registering my company, I'll be putting more hours into my craft and here we go boys, let's work on our plans

    • @bhaveshbisht2083
      @bhaveshbisht2083 Месяц назад

      @@von.changfeng :- how is it going?

    • @Ak-bs1wd
      @Ak-bs1wd 17 дней назад

      ​@@von.changfeng me tooo

  • @ryanrichter357
    @ryanrichter357 Год назад +1316

    i think it’s less about active studying as it is thinking about it ALL the time. active studying matters but when you love something you don’t stop studying when you close a textbook. i’d bet people like feynman never stop thinking about how the world works

    • @Martin-iw1ll
      @Martin-iw1ll Год назад +73

      Oh yeah, he says he does calculus when he is eating, driving and even when talking to his wife.

    • @l.4070
      @l.4070 Год назад +25

      I'd say anyone who's studying/reaserching something that really pokes their interest would probably do the same or similar if not same. For example I in generally love biology chemistry and physics and when I stop studying I'd continue thinking about them in the background of my mind. Sometimes if I'm sitting with someone while thinking they'd be mad at me for "not being here" and not talking to them so yeah I think it's all about interest + the more you know the more information you have to use to think.

    • @mattorr2256
      @mattorr2256 Год назад +4

      I know he didn’t ever stop because I never stop thinking about how the universe works. If I do it, then no doubt Feynman did

    • @anthonygerace8926
      @anthonygerace8926 Год назад +10

      That's true of many artists and musicians also. I have a friend who's a classical composer. Sometimes when she's working on a new piece she'll forget to eat or sleep for a day or two.

    • @joaomarcos2089
      @joaomarcos2089 Год назад +20

      The problem is a lot of people have to study with purely utilitarian or professional ends, which preclude this genuine and constant interest.

  • @BarryKnighten
    @BarryKnighten Месяц назад +79

    I'm favoured, $65K every week! I can now give back to the locals in my community and also support God's work and the church. God bless
    America

    • @NatashaJ.Bunting
      @NatashaJ.Bunting Месяц назад

      Please how do vou achieve this feat consistently?

    • @BarryKnighten
      @BarryKnighten Месяц назад

      @@NatashaJ.Bunting I usually go with registered representatives. Sophia chandler has the best performance history (in my opinion) and does offer 1v1 consultation to her capitalists which I think is amazing.

    • @MadeleineGaston
      @MadeleineGaston Месяц назад

      Wow... She has really made good name for herself, she's also my account manager

    • @MadeleineGaston
      @MadeleineGaston Месяц назад

      Talking to an expert like Sophia chandler to reshape your portfolio is a very smart move

    • @AnnaW.Mosquera
      @AnnaW.Mosquera Месяц назад

      So you guys know her too?...
      she made my husband and I have our own house and car.
      She is wonderful 😊!

  • @YeketeJosephine
    @YeketeJosephine 9 месяцев назад +384

    "What I cannot create, I don't understand" - Mr. Feynman. Feynman is not just a physicist, he's an artist.

    • @sylviasomaduroff4472
      @sylviasomaduroff4472 4 месяца назад

      We live in his mind when we explore free will as he saw it, he let us escape the Einstein process of God not playing dice with the universe. We have him to thank for this freedom of thought.

  • @bluechiefawesome5587
    @bluechiefawesome5587 Год назад +626

    To make an image of what he says, kids learn their first language by listening, talking, making mistakes and practicing without worrying about looking silly. How they do NOT learn is by sitting down and cramming grammar rules and aiming at perfect spelling on the first try. That's how you ''study hard'' and ''study smart''.

    • @СергейПлугатырёв
      @СергейПлугатырёв Год назад +28

      That's just wrong. I mean if you have to sound like a 4 year old you could have a go at it but grammar, active listening, learning from your past mistakes etc. are simply THE way to learn a language. Not to mention a child's world is small and a number of things you have to know is ridiculously limited which is alright for a child but not for an adult.

    • @somefuckstolemynick
      @somefuckstolemynick Год назад

      @@СергейПлугатырёв that would mean people before formal education didn’t learn their languages past the level of a 4 yo.. nonsense.
      You don’t learn your first language in school, you learn it by trial and error.
      That said, formal language training applied effectively utilizes the high intelligence, focus and experience of adults to learn languages in a more time efficient manner.

    • @Moltenlava
      @Moltenlava Год назад +7

      A childs brain and an adults brain are radically different when it come to learning

    • @carlosmolinagodoy1115
      @carlosmolinagodoy1115 Год назад +10

      ​@@Moltenlavawell... I had the same mindset, but, I recently watched a interview where the invited was a neurologist, he said that both children like adults have the same brain plasticity.

    • @somefuckstolemynick
      @somefuckstolemynick Год назад

      @@Moltenlava yes, an adult can leverage more complex thinking to learn in more ways and much more efficiently.
      That doesn’t change the fact that you need to use the language, speak it with other people and allow yourself to experience the uncomfortable process of trial and error to really become fluent.
      No amount of flashcards and grammar study can replace real emersion in the language. All formal language study does is assist and speed up the process. But we still _learn_ the language the same way children do.

  • @alosyus
    @alosyus Год назад +457

    It's really something I needed to hear. I never worked hard in my life. To get my high school diploma, I never studied, but I got it. At university I dropped from Theoretial Physics as I didn't want to work and I knew I was about to fail as what I did in high shcool would not worked there. So I applied for my first programmer job and got it. 17 years later, I'm a software developer working for a big company. My coworkers all have phd's or master degree and I make a good amount of money. But I still have this dream to become an astrophysicist. So here I'm, going back to university to become what I wanted, ready to work hard to get it.

    • @studybug987
      @studybug987 Год назад +21

      U will absolutely achieve your dream!!!

    • @debrachambers1304
      @debrachambers1304 11 месяцев назад +8

      I know a guy who went back to get an astrophysics degree in his 30s after working as a network engineer.

    • @felixz2703
      @felixz2703 11 месяцев назад

      @@debrachambers1304did he finish?

    • @zweihanderenjoyer4003
      @zweihanderenjoyer4003 11 месяцев назад +12

      I'm at a similar roadblock. Kinda breezed through high school without putting in any actual effort, now stuck at college, trying to get through Computer Science, restarted (switched schools) 2 times now. Still not sure how to become adept at working hard.

    • @ParthMalekar-mt3jw
      @ParthMalekar-mt3jw 11 месяцев назад +4

      I'm rooting for you mate!

  • @koi1440
    @koi1440 Год назад +115

    I learned from one of my professors from my college that if you are losing interest in life or anything then you should just go deeper into it and look for the solutions and it will automatically brings interest in your life

    • @ShawnFX
      @ShawnFX Год назад +8

      thanks for sharing! idk if its depression or what, but the past few years now I have not been looking forward to the future. But now I have to change my mindset and look deeper for solutions

    • @edwardmitchell6581
      @edwardmitchell6581 10 месяцев назад

      I wish I had your professor. Mine said "AI? Well that's pretty boring. You just throw more compute at it and magic happens. I want to understand what's going on."

    • @nickseth17
      @nickseth17 4 месяца назад

      The double down principal

    • @athmapriya
      @athmapriya Месяц назад +1

      Hits hard. I quit engineering studies because I was going nowhere with the effort I took. After being in depression I decided to look deep into it and I realised I liked writing more than doing problems. Now I am a Functional English major life is going good.☺

    • @Bull-ph1gf
      @Bull-ph1gf 7 дней назад

      haha thanks

  • @emdirtyyo1827
    @emdirtyyo1827 Год назад +139

    "What I cannot create, I don't understand" - Mr. Feynman

  • @psgouros
    @psgouros Год назад +57

    The 4 day work week is for people who want to devote their own time to their own interests.
    I have a lot to do, but it’s not necessarily what I’m being paid for.

    • @ninjafruitchilled
      @ninjafruitchilled Год назад +15

      Exactly. We can't all have jobs that inspire us to work at it 24/7, so we need time after the work is done to do the actually interesting things. I *used* to do physics and yeah I didn't mind working a lot because it was kind of fun and I didn't have a family, but it didn't pay the bills and didn't have any job security. Now I earn two or three times what I did as a scientist, and yeah it's more boring but I am not working a minute outside my 9-5 4 days a week, and overall life is better.

    • @nickseth17
      @nickseth17 4 месяца назад +9

      That guy was so ego driven lol. The way he spoke and stuff he said was very self centered. Not everyone is living his circumstance. My guy that followed after him
      Killed it !

    • @nahnah5085
      @nahnah5085 3 месяца назад

      That guy was so smug

    • @Jimbo292
      @Jimbo292 2 месяца назад +5

      @@nickseth17 yeah he seemed clueless and unempathetic. Why oh why would people want to work less??? How could we ever know? WHAT??? people DONT love sitting behind a desk for 40+ hours a week?
      Dont get me wrong, there is an issue with work ethic for many people. But the issue here is more that these people are not passionate about what they do, it is merely a means to an end. Of course people in that situation would want to be at work less.

  • @devanshseven
    @devanshseven 9 месяцев назад +298

    00:06 Studying and hard work are key to understanding complex subjects
    00:41 Obsession can lead to great accomplishments.
    01:09 Changing the world requires hard work
    01:35 Focus on how much you do rather than just working smart
    01:55 Becoming an expert requires 10,000 hours of work
    02:14 Spending 10,000 hours on deliberate effort makes you an expert.
    02:39 Tracking progress is motivating and helps identify mistakes
    02:59 Don't focus on past mistakes, keep working
    Crafted by Merlin AI.

  • @duskhopper
    @duskhopper Год назад +218

    This ain’t HOW to study hard

    • @fatimaanwar4379
      @fatimaanwar4379 5 месяцев назад +14

      this is how to study hard by studying hard 😅😅

    • @theshepherdsfaithproject
      @theshepherdsfaithproject 3 месяца назад +20

      It is..
      The secret is picking a subject you can develop and sustain a genuine interest in... and devote as much time as much time as possible to it 🤷🏽‍♂️
      Every other thing will fall in place 💯

    • @Eman_Puedama
      @Eman_Puedama 2 месяца назад +5

      ​@@theshepherdsfaithproject
      That doesn't sound like a great secret.

    • @willyfuziki1556
      @willyfuziki1556 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@Eman_Puedamai don't think there are secrets and hacks to study

    • @kurai544
      @kurai544 2 месяца назад

      This is why u study hard

  • @HazellRahh
    @HazellRahh 9 месяцев назад +7

    This whole "hard work" mantra that 'muricans preach...it is quite laughable. There is ZERO correlation between "hard work" (and who's defining that, btw) and success. If you are interested in something, it isn't work and you will naturally devote more time to it than the "average" person. Some are more gifted than others in areas, as well. As for the 4-day workweek, it's brilliant in today's world. So is working from home for many professions. The part by Richard Feynman I totally agree with.

  • @GodofStories
    @GodofStories Год назад +36

    Why put Richard Feynman in the title, if you are including all others. They are brilliant folks too, but don't use Feynman's name on the video. You must be a computer scientist to put Carmack, and Karpathy. It's all good. Good video anyhow. :)

    • @mrr5183
      @mrr5183 Год назад

      Seems to be a big Lex Fridman fan :D

  • @Dhruvbala
    @Dhruvbala Год назад +486

    "If you can even want something in the first place, you are probably qualified to achieve it."
    Can't remember where I heard this, but one of the most profound sayings I've come across

    • @x_G7
      @x_G7 Год назад +1

      true

    • @Alexandra.AI.
      @Alexandra.AI. 11 месяцев назад +2

      Earl Nightingale

    • @TeaRex
      @TeaRex 11 месяцев назад +12

      I want to steal the sun

    • @ankitapati1107
      @ankitapati1107 10 месяцев назад +2

      wow!!Spot on.Believing along these lines will definitely help in getting rid of self-doubt.

    • @CastleHassall
      @CastleHassall 10 месяцев назад

      hey that's a good one... it takes DOING the process needed to get there too.. that's key to it too.. Potential Techniques talks about that for getting through tough times and building things up etc

  • @coolfreaks68
    @coolfreaks68 Год назад +31

    *10000 hours is a lot! It's like spending 6 hours a day for 5 long years. That's the time scholars spend for doing a PhD.*

    • @prathamgupta06
      @prathamgupta06 4 месяца назад +1

      That's when you are called as 'Expert' or 'Professional', and you join the elite club. But it only takes 2 things to get there: A sprinkle of passion or interest and a sea full of Determination and Resilience

  • @likith_aj7411
    @likith_aj7411 5 месяцев назад +17

    Me studying on how to study instead of studying 😢

    • @w12266
      @w12266 4 месяца назад

      Xd

  • @flamebows5814
    @flamebows5814 Год назад +468

    Probably the most motivational video I've watched in a long time. They are all my mentors in a way - the reason why i'm dedicated to learning SWE is because of Systrom and my motivation to go into AI is because of Andrej and Lex. The notion of "I can learn anything" is because of Feynman. Great video!!

    • @further_rush5138
      @further_rush5138 10 месяцев назад

      Oh wow I am also learning ai because of lex

    • @edwardmitchell6581
      @edwardmitchell6581 10 месяцев назад +2

      Going into SWE is the right way to go for AI. Be able to build finished product.

  • @OverSmart13
    @OverSmart13 Год назад +46

    beautiful people saying beauty doesn't matter, rich people saying money doesn't matter, now talented people saying talent doesn't matter

    • @MethenySco
      @MethenySco Год назад +14

      Irritating isn’t it?

    • @OverSmart13
      @OverSmart13 Год назад +14

      @@MethenySco indeed. Let's say working hard is the key to talent. But mate,, working hard is the talent 😂

    • @alexguttler1900
      @alexguttler1900 5 месяцев назад +2

      You have a good point, but is interesting think that people say that bc they know how is have that things. Anyway, we should wait to get thats achiviement that they have :)

    • @akmohitgaming2306
      @akmohitgaming2306 5 месяцев назад +1

      Bcoz they know 😊

    • @6121FRobotics
      @6121FRobotics 3 месяца назад +2

      @@OverSmart13 that is... literally the point of the video. Working hard IS the talent. There's no innate talent that automatically makes you the best at something

  • @paul-d-mann
    @paul-d-mann 9 месяцев назад +7

    This video is titled as a video regarding Richard Feynman. Why was I watching some other unknowns rabble on about 10,000 hours.. 10k hours is a myth.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Месяц назад

      Glad to see someone else who doesn't buy the 10 000 hours claim. I think it takes way, way longer, and in any case, mastery is an ongoing process, not a destination.

  • @dank_sanatani
    @dank_sanatani Год назад +83

    " I was an ordinary student"
    Also him : solving integral calculus at the age of 12.

    • @Martin-iw1ll
      @Martin-iw1ll Год назад +4

      But don't people start doing differential and integral calculus at age 14 and 15 at school, in year 9 and 10?

    • @edits_heimer
      @edits_heimer Год назад +9

      actually, the school system has changed, nowadays, integrals are late-teached compared to how it was old.

    • @DrYou-Mbbs_edu
      @DrYou-Mbbs_edu Год назад

      @@edits_heimer not in India brother.. here a good number of children start learning basics of calculus as early from grade 8 or9 and all have to start ir by grade 11

    • @dsingsit
      @dsingsit Год назад +1

      @@DrYou-Mbbs_edu in icse that is

    • @DrYou-Mbbs_edu
      @DrYou-Mbbs_edu Год назад

      @@dsingsit my school is a cbse and a show off so they start early.. like for me it was 9th grade but by 11th im pretty sure all students i.e those who are in Science stream at least have to learn basics of calculus

  • @govindchouhan.5435
    @govindchouhan.5435 Год назад +28

    Whenever I become clumsy I watch this to fuel my -self may be one day I give my example to other' to study Hard but if u like my comment it really motivate me to STUDY HARD.
    -1st year student of IIT Bombay (ECE).

    • @ArjunKocher
      @ArjunKocher  Год назад +5

      good luck.
      do not rely on motivation;
      be disciplined enough to do what you have to do specially when you don't want to

    • @Parthjoshi1993
      @Parthjoshi1993 8 месяцев назад +5

      Bro doesn't know whom he's telling 😅

  •  Год назад +216

    "It has been reported-including by Feynman himself-that he only obtained a score of 125 on a school IQ test. I suspect that this test emphasized verbal, as opposed to mathematical, ability. Feynman received the highest score in the country by a large margin on the notoriously difficult Putnam mathematics competition exam, although he joined the MIT team on short notice and did not prepare for the test."

    • @iweather-nr6kp
      @iweather-nr6kp Год назад +41

      ^This. This is what people dont understand about iq. The number alone is meaningless without the defiitions attached to it by the particular test. Some kids score 220+ on a stanford binet lm than 135-140 on another

    • @SCBA-if4wl
      @SCBA-if4wl Год назад

      the source does not mention putnam btw. we don't know if it's the actual puntam exam

    • @OneilFe
      @OneilFe Год назад +22

      IQ is a speed test. Its advantageous but it doesn't mean its a prerequisite. Scientific research is more about creativity, thinking outside the box.

    • @SCBA-if4wl
      @SCBA-if4wl Год назад +8

      @@OneilFe cope

    • @Niko_from_Kepler
      @Niko_from_Kepler Год назад

      @@iweather-nr6kpYou can’t score 220. 190 is the absolute maximum.

  • @keithdow8327
    @keithdow8327 Год назад +52

    Interesting stuff, but some of it is rubbish. The 10,000 hour idea was created by K. Anders Ericsson studying violinists. It doesn't apply to other fields. Also the 10,000 hours requires "deliberate practice", not just 10.000 hours, as stated by one of the speakers.
    Plus worthy of note is the N.Y. Times best seller "Moon Walking with Einstein" by Joshua Foer. Foer worked with the help of Ericsson to become the U.S. memory champion, in less than a year. He worked about half an hour a day. So in less than 200 hours he became a world class expert. Unfortunately it didn't occur to Foer that he had shown the 10,000 hour rule is rubbish.

    • @NutjobChuck
      @NutjobChuck Год назад +9

      There is such a thing as muscle memory, or even, the equivalent such memory for mental learning. And this is a passive sort of practice that goes on even if you aren’t actively performing a task. It is impacted by, as you say, “deliberate practice,” as your mind is formulating and integrating what you have done into natural habit. So this would validate the 10,000 hour idea, but the 10,000 idea is really generalized and is really only meant to serve as a rough marker of how long it will take from the onset of learning a skill to the mastering of it.

    • @luciel3910
      @luciel3910 Год назад +7

      ​@@NutjobChuckin this other Hand it is proven, that you need to Take Breaks. Because your brain does stuff while you are not learning. There isnt Just studying hard, but also studying smart.

    • @keithdow8327
      @keithdow8327 Год назад +1

      @@julianhernandez3192
      It isn't just his opinion. He published data on violinists why supported the claim and thought it extended to other fields.

    • @echahedhamdi
      @echahedhamdi Год назад

      Bro don't miss you have life you have goal intiatid destined from the first day you start thinking maturely that need to be achieved spending 10k for your dream is likely year and half from deeply work is nothing from what I belive

    • @keithdow8327
      @keithdow8327 Год назад

      @@echahedhamdi
      Failed chatbot.

  • @vonBottorff
    @vonBottorff Год назад +109

    I believe Einstein was a maverick thinker who throughout his education bucked the system and went after what he thought was important to learn and know. I'd include this -- whatever it's called --too.

    • @lunam7249
      @lunam7249 Год назад +1

      he was a THIEF. a great intellectual , mathematical and patent THIEF from tel aviv

    • @geometerfpv2804
      @geometerfpv2804 Год назад +9

      Yes, but that very frequently doesn't work. He got very, very lucky: a certain pet philosophical idea of his ended up being the key. It never happened again for him. It is much more repeatable to work with the community, not against it.

    • @GiseleLazareva
      @GiseleLazareva Год назад

      maverick

    • @edwardmitchell6581
      @edwardmitchell6581 10 месяцев назад

      @@geometerfpv2804 He actually two ideas in. And in a single year.

    • @rpearce25
      @rpearce25 10 месяцев назад

      What Einstein did isn't really a principle we can all follow. He also tried to stay within the standard academic track, not reject it, but the system rejected him because of anti Jewish sentiment. Were he not Jewish he likely never would have ended up in a clerks office, day dreaming his ground breaking ideas about time and space.

  • @elementm5428
    @elementm5428 Год назад +8

    @ 1:25 "but when I read about companies going to 4 day week work, I chuckle, I can't get enough done with a 7 day week"
    This guy is probably an entrepreneur. If he was an employee, he'd have been fired for not doing enough in a 7 day work week. I wonder what he does that even a 7 day work week is short for him.
    In today's job market, employees are replaceable, if not with another employee, with computers, machinery, etc. With a 4 day work week, you'll have time to upskill yourself so you don't become irrelevant.

  • @jorinryms2943
    @jorinryms2943 Год назад +6

    The 10,000 hour concept has been proven wrong for a while, now. The 4-day work week has been proven effective. Comparing yourself to your past self instead of someone else is an accurate statement. Outside of what Feynman says, this video doesn't deserve very much credence.

  • @kashishnagpal6715
    @kashishnagpal6715 Год назад +42

    I don't know why they all try to make so-called hard work difficult. It's something you are passionate about, you love it, hence, you are able to do it more than others.

  • @Khanosaurus
    @Khanosaurus Год назад +10

    This works when you're doing work that you love doing for yourself or a certain goal. It shouldn't be applied to normal jobs or careers, where the goal should be do a good amount and then come back to your life, family and friends. Not everybody needs to be a prodigy, a normal existence is nothing to be ashamed of. This hustle culture has become very toxic.

  • @neutronstar7803
    @neutronstar7803 Год назад +83

    I wish he was right. I personnaly studied extremely hard to join french elite schools. People use to tell me that I am brilliant. But what I know deep inside from first hand experience is that they are people who understand things faster than me. These 2 qualities help tremendously when you compete with others in exams for instance. And although I did very well in academics, I was always frustrated when I had to work for the exact same result twice as hard as people who had these extraordinary abilities. And believe me, the same way they are people taller and stronger than most of us they are people like Feynman who are more intelligent than 99,99% of us. and whatever you do, you can not catch up with them. You just have to accept and watch them shine.

    • @keizan5132
      @keizan5132 Год назад +29

      As someone considered to be "way faster" than my peers, I can tell you that's BS. Every single student that gets there has to work their absolute hardest. What is perceived as "talent" has more to do with the background or privileges a person might've had prior to a certain point. Do some research on Feynman's own early life and you'll see exactly what I'm talking about.

    • @mk-md8ee
      @mk-md8ee 10 месяцев назад +8

      As someone (at least for some time) considered faster then my peers, I agree that hard work is part of it, but still there are people studying harder and achiving less, then others who didn't study at all.

    • @6121FRobotics
      @6121FRobotics 3 месяца назад +3

      Feynman's IQ was actually pretty much average. I think if I'm not mistaken it was something like 120. It's BS. Sure, there are some people that will understand concepts better than you. But there is nothing that thousands of hours of work won't make up. They might work a hundred hours: work ten times more than that and you'll be better. It's difficult: but not impossible to catch up with so called "brilliant people"

    • @acesk4949
      @acesk4949 2 месяца назад +2

      You're wrong. That's your opinion. People get far with talent but yet they still really need to work hard. In your case you're saying as if you had no talent well neither do I i feel that but if you're pointing out that you're slower than them and need to work twice in order to get the same result? Give me a break, you choose wisely, fail and watch them shine and shine with them? Don't even think you can't out shine them you probably don't even know their secrets they might be someone who has no talents in mathematics, an iq of only 120 but despite that they are knowledgeable and have extremely good problem solving skills 😂 cmon, don't compare yourself to them!! Hasn't the video already mentioned everything? I'm saying this as a grade 11 student i'm not some college student like you guys but i understand this things and I won't ever give in into those kinds of doubts and thoughts I choose to fight cuz I'd rather die than not.

    • @6121FRobotics
      @6121FRobotics 2 месяца назад

      @@acesk4949 did you just have a stroke

  • @PpTheGreatest
    @PpTheGreatest Год назад +64

    There is only half a truth here. Hard work is a necessary condition for brilliance, but it most certainly is not sufficient. The fundamental bottleneck encountered as your progress to higher and higher echelons of a technical field is the rate at which you learn - that is certainly not constant from person to person and is not solely a function of method or time investment. That is what talent really represents, the ability to learn fast. By learn, I mean assimilating the known ideas and being able to use them in the invention new ideas. The speed with which ideas can be generated and then fully considered is key in determining progress.

    • @suryanshu8692
      @suryanshu8692 Год назад +3

      thats when neuroplasticity comes, you can train your brain to do so. So again whats ur point ?

    • @cracknblast8247
      @cracknblast8247 Год назад +8

      @@suryanshu8692 His point is some people have better brains than others. Genetics are a factor.

    • @roxymigurdia1
      @roxymigurdia1 Год назад

      then you could argue some people are more neuroplastic than others. also neuroplasticity cannot just make your brain "smarter." @@suryanshu8692

    • @Ishar___X
      @Ishar___X Год назад +1

      ​@@suryanshu8692 yeah why do mathematicians try for 150 plus years to prove Riemann's hypothesis ? You should just "train" your brain to be powerful enough and then solve the problem for them.

    • @suryanshu8692
      @suryanshu8692 Год назад

      @@Ishar___X well,technically...yes

  • @mk-md8ee
    @mk-md8ee 10 месяцев назад +7

    In my personal experience thats not always true. Sure, hard work often pays of, but there are people who need to study more and some who need to do it less and some not at all.
    I study physics myself and am very passionate about it and like to work hard, but there are a lot of people who just have some kind of deeper understanding from the beginning on. Of course they also study hard, but when I study hard I get to the point where they startet from and they get to a completely different point.
    I mean I'm still good enough to get a degree, understand a lot of things and be happy with that, but I know it wouldn't make sense to become like an theoretical physicist. Cause I know, I would never stand a chance against the real pros and would probably be sad in the end.
    What I wanna say: do something where hard work really pays of

    • @oishikhasan8500
      @oishikhasan8500 9 месяцев назад +1

      I am a physics student too and being in college level academia has given me a rude awakening. I used to believe in the hard work mythology until I met students in physics who naturally grasped almost any math/physics concept they came across that may take me a whole semester to even begin to wrap my head around. After getting my degree I am quitting physics too. My brain is not built for that stuff.

  • @michelecamba
    @michelecamba 11 месяцев назад +36

    You know, tomorro i'm going to graduate. I always tend to belittle my work and efforts, but this video really put me in the mood. Even if I still don't feel like I've arrived, it doesn't mean I haven't come a long way. it won't be the final goal, but it still deserves to be celebrated. thanks for the inspiration

    • @ankitapati1107
      @ankitapati1107 10 месяцев назад

      Why do you belittle your work and efforts?You should celebrate the small wins.

    • @rismhnfhh
      @rismhnfhh 9 месяцев назад

      congratulations on your graduation, bud!

    • @nnicollan
      @nnicollan 9 месяцев назад

      congratulations!

    • @jacqueslee2592
      @jacqueslee2592 7 месяцев назад +1

      *tomorrow

  • @ShawnFX
    @ShawnFX Год назад +21

    I wish this video was longer, very well made!! Loved the advice at 2:24, I constantly compare myself to others, especially people I used to be in classes with in college, seeing them with all these great jobs while I currently dont. But I am only going to compare myself to myself from last year, last 6 months, last month from now on

  • @Fircasice
    @Fircasice Год назад +14

    The guy who looks down upon the idea of a 4 day work week probably never has heard of the idea of "work-life balance". IF you are blessed enough for your job to be what is also your passion in life, then you can pour all your time into it. The majority of people are not as blessed. Not everyone can be a scientist. There are a lot of menial and monotonous jobs that need to be done so society doesn't collapse. It's quite arrogant, assuming and also ignorant to put those jobs on the same level as what he gets to do.

  • @NatarajaYogi
    @NatarajaYogi Год назад +18

    Thing about Feynman was he was an expert in getting down to the core principles of things.

  • @Ishar___X
    @Ishar___X Год назад +11

    Terence Tao and Grigori Perelman are great examples of living breathing "miracle people". Ofc almost everyone can achieve mundane greatness with a lot of hard work. However 99.999999999% of the population of earth no matter how hard they work even if they had 10 lifetimes instead of one would still not be able to even come remotely close to solving a millennium problem.

    • @samuelwaller7013
      @samuelwaller7013 Год назад +1

      That makes around 8 ppl who can

    • @Ishar___X
      @Ishar___X Год назад +1

      @@samuelwaller7013 yeah this means massive success. 8 millennium problems solved in the next 100 or so years. I would consider that very optimistic.

  • @firstlast-gr9xs
    @firstlast-gr9xs Год назад +58

    Some people are Mozart…some are feiman , some Newton , some Einstein and some are NOT ..

    • @thecritiquer5976
      @thecritiquer5976 Год назад +11

      "Most" are NOT

    • @nexuscross3233
      @nexuscross3233 Год назад +12

      ​@@thecritiquer5976They don't have to be, everyone has an individual genius within them, a HUGE untapped potential some realise it to some extent, most do not.

    • @Mechanicaa
      @Mechanicaa Год назад +3

      @@nexuscross3233 Exactly, the average human being’s brain capacity is larger than any super computer ever made, and by a LOT, to the point of petabytes

    • @cracknblast8247
      @cracknblast8247 Год назад +3

      @@Mechanicaa Human memory, in fact is so vast, there really isn't a way to measure it. I had researched this some time ago and found it very interesting. The best conclusion I found was that the human limit of memory is equivalent to living more than 3 centuries. No wonder people with perfect memory exist, they are proof, although genetic outliers.

    • @bluesque9687
      @bluesque9687 Год назад +2

      Newton, Mozart and Einstein you mention... well, there has to be a higher league... a natural ability... like Usain Bolt at running(no matter how hard I practice, I can't run like him)... otherwise human race and even its progress will seem so utterly dull!! They hit orbits we can't, but we replicate as much as we can to fill in the gap... and thats how we move forward, isn't it?

  • @rcnelson
    @rcnelson 9 месяцев назад +3

    Sure, even brilliant people have to work and study hard to master fields such as math and physics. But let's face it: a man has to know his limits. Some of us, including me, could try to move heaven and earth and learn science, but what a waste of time and effort it would be. Better to concentrate on what we've an aptitude for.

  • @CYON4D
    @CYON4D Год назад +83

    This is probably one of the best life advice one can get. The hard part is not understanding this fact but having enough discipline and drive to study a certain subject.

  • @mathewp3416
    @mathewp3416 3 месяца назад +7

    His true superpower is passion. It's hard to be passionate like that about something.

  • @dear_dennis
    @dear_dennis Год назад +8

    3 minute video, 30 seconds of Richard Feynman.

  • @laujulius3999
    @laujulius3999 Год назад +6

    Work 4 days per week for the company but 7 days per week for yourself

  • @motomoto7721
    @motomoto7721 Год назад +9

    At age 6, a very good friend of mine was able to resolve x-y 2 factors equations, that you normally learn at age 14. I think talent exist. However I think talent without work is just capabilities...

    • @keizan5132
      @keizan5132 Год назад +3

      I did that at 8. No special talent at all, I had an uncle who studied engineering and taught me. It's all about having contact with it at an early age, "the strength of the habltude"
      And, of cuorse, about having the passion to comtinue on that path.

  • @MrYash1381
    @MrYash1381 Год назад +39

    My takeaway from this is that if I believe I'm talented in something, it's actually not that easy. It becomes depressing sometimes to learn that all that praise earned is just something I had no role in getting. So when I learn that this bottom-up approach to expertise is good, so must the role of top down be modest. I'll now tell myself that if I do something well, I've surely put in the work.

  • @zahraghaffari1350
    @zahraghaffari1350 Год назад +9

    Great
    practicing, reading, study work, thinking, mathematics and timeline

  • @ninjafruitchilled
    @ninjafruitchilled Год назад +1

    I bet that guy confused by the 4 day work week trend doesn't have kids, or if he does he spends shit all time raising them.

  • @smrd0110
    @smrd0110 Год назад +20

    Don't let this video fool you. Feynman was an extraordinary genius.

    • @keizan5132
      @keizan5132 Год назад +16

      It's not just a video, it's Feynman himself talking about his own experience. But, of cuorse, I guess people should listen to your wiser opinion since you know better than himself about his own mind.

    • @smrd0110
      @smrd0110 Год назад

      There are two kinds of geniuses, the “ordinary” and the “magicians.” An ordinary genius is a fellow that you and I would be just as good as, if we were only many times better. There is no mystery as to how his mind works. Once we understand what they have done, we feel certain that we, too, could have done it. It is different with the magicians. They are, to use mathematical jargon, in the orthogonal complement of where we are and the working of their minds is for all intents and purposes incomprehensible. Even after we understand what they have done, the process by which they have done it is completely dark. They seldom, if ever, have students because they cannot be emulated and it must be terribly frustrating for a brilliant young mind to cope with the mysterious ways in which the magician’s mind works. Richard Feynman is a magician of the highest caliber.
      -Mark Kac, quoted by James Gleick in Genius@@keizan5132

  • @aventura1266
    @aventura1266 Год назад +9

    the thing about the 4 day work week is not about accomplishing things, it's about retaining people to do work that's not as interesting, by people not obsessed with it. Try forcing a 4 day work week on someone that anyways thinks physics everyday. You'll work a little bit of physics 7 days a week, probably more than a little bit too.

    • @ChicoTunda
      @ChicoTunda Год назад +3

      Exactly! I think that guy had some sort of disconnect with the situation. Like I don’t know what his point was. Like, okay so you can’t get enough of what you specifically want done in a 7 day work week, so are you saying that everyone should be working as much as possible? No matter who they work for or what they do? Like mentally that’s not possible.

    • @ninjafruitchilled
      @ninjafruitchilled Год назад +2

      Yes for a supposed smart person that was a pretty dumb thing for that guy to say.

  • @0213DYN
    @0213DYN Год назад +29

    the main things we should focus on are to protect our passion on something we are interested and keep improving by spending time on doing it with ACTION. Do not compare yourself with others, do not be little yourself, do not discouraged yourself. As long as you can keep doing it, you will unlock your maximum potential in your life.

    • @0213DYN
      @0213DYN Год назад +3

      Minimize your distraction and maximize your executions

    • @blackhawk4465
      @blackhawk4465 Год назад

      Copium overdose

  • @hxpponaut197
    @hxpponaut197 Год назад +26

    Being a master at something is 10% talent and 90% hard work

  • @imstudying4120
    @imstudying4120 Год назад +48

    I will start a PhD soon in applied maths to continuum mechanics. This video motivates me a lot. I think I will watch it every day.

    • @ArjunKocher
      @ArjunKocher  Год назад +7

      Good luck.

    • @Martin-iw1ll
      @Martin-iw1ll Год назад +2

      What is continuous mechanics? Or do you mean continuum mechanics?

    • @imstudying4120
      @imstudying4120 Год назад +4

      @@Martin-iw1ll yes, of course it is continuum mechanics. English is not my native language ahah.

    • @MMoledina
      @MMoledina 10 месяцев назад

      Can I ask somethng ? @@imstudying4120

  • @bankPO-job-preparation5353
    @bankPO-job-preparation5353 Год назад +2

    1:34 because you've no life outside work. work is your life.
    for others, there is life outside work. family, friends, hobbies etc
    don't be so self centered

  • @jignavsharma
    @jignavsharma Год назад +6

    4 day work weeks are the greatest known to man

  • @nblastoise4479
    @nblastoise4479 9 месяцев назад +1

    3500hours in league of Legends,now i know why i still hardstuck in bronze,6500 hours left

  • @DonglinZheng
    @DonglinZheng 10 месяцев назад +10

    Feynman is not just a physicist, he's an artist

  • @thomasbeatty9496
    @thomasbeatty9496 Год назад +1

    Dr. Feynman; I have followed you closely since the 60's. I have admired your work, and admired you as an individual and as a professor of physics. I have read your Green Books and display them prominently in my library. However, I must disagree with you as regards to your thesis any discipline can be mastered with hard work. Intelligence Quotient plays a significant part in anyone's ability to master any discipline. I remain unconvinced someone with an IQ of 80 can master higher forms of mathematics such as Linear Algebra, Calculus. and Tensor Algebra to name but a few.

  • @y2099_
    @y2099_ 6 месяцев назад +3

    stop adding background music it's distracting.

    • @nickseth17
      @nickseth17 5 месяцев назад

      You should start with .."in my opinion" lol. Because it's not distracting. It gets me focused and I feel curious from the music.

  • @CaptainJerry16
    @CaptainJerry16 Месяц назад +1

    This is not "How to study hard" This is "Why you must study hard" cmon

  • @Dieselshukla
    @Dieselshukla 8 месяцев назад +3

    Don’t think just by watching these videos you are doing something productive . You have to put all that effort they say in practice so start doing . Best day to start was yesterday next best day to start is today.

  • @AbhishekTiwari-we4vh
    @AbhishekTiwari-we4vh 2 месяца назад +1

    Its difficult untill you think instead of doing. Once you start doing, failing, finding out ways, keep on trying, after consistent effort, it seems possible and now you are unstoppable because now you are enjoying the challenges. Here we go. Now if you are already smart you fail less learn fast, figure out things quickly but its not impossible for anyone.
    I am not very smart but figured things out.
    One more thing, reason to do all this bullshit should be very strong. Otherwise your mind will always convice you to watch movies, webseries, play video games instead of doing hard work. But if your why is strong than nothing can stop you. You are all the way up.

  • @supergeek0177
    @supergeek0177 Год назад +3

    I think the issue becomes that if you grow up from a financial disadvantage it will put you behind others in terms of probability of success.
    Imagine having to choose between working or going to school? I don't know about you but I cannot study on an empty study as much as I have tried lol.
    The point I am making is you are more likely to succeed if you have a stabilized upbringing with at least one parent who is working so you can be provided with basic things and kind of like Maslow's hierarchy - You will only begin to be able to achieve more once your basic needs are being met, you can begin to focus intently on other areas of personal development.
    For example, I missed a lot of school when I was younger due to a bad home situation and then had to work from my teens in an almost full-time capacity to help pay off debts that my mother had, so of course I dreamed about wanting to go and study, and go to university. But it wasn't until I was 30 that I finally got the financial opportunity to, and now even after qualifying, I now get discriminated against by recruiters due to being 35 yrs old and only just qualifying in my profession!
    Such as life right?

  • @Yassuz
    @Yassuz 3 месяца назад +1

    One of the best clickbait I have ever seen.

  • @ashish_sunny
    @ashish_sunny Год назад +8

    thank you so much for curating this Arjun! I've seen snippets of some of these convos in Lex Clips, but this is a brilliant compilation!

  • @theworldof_Atif
    @theworldof_Atif 8 месяцев назад +1

    Atleast he is telling us to study hard not like just those influencer who says you can get A+ for studying 2 hours in the previous night of exam( like freaking bullshit).
    Study till you dont get it.

  • @pramithasdhakal5367
    @pramithasdhakal5367 Год назад +8

    To excel in any field you need to work smart and hard. This is what I gathered from this video

  • @DakarBlues
    @DakarBlues 11 месяцев назад +2

    "When natural inclination develops into a passionate desire, one advances towards his goals in seven-league boots"
    Nikola Tesla
    “A spirit with a vision is a dream with a mission"
    Neil Peart
    "Passionless talent will, nine times out of ten, yield to relentless passion"
    Modiene Kane 05/08/20

  • @NightWear21
    @NightWear21 9 месяцев назад +4

    I needed to hear this. I've been fighting myself for years. Logic vs emotions. I'm normally very emotional (inside not necessarily expressive). Yet, i've been studying electrical and electronics for a LONG TIME. Always questioning.. "do others GET this stuff?" Yes, they do.. but only after that threshold of experience, training and education, of "AHA". Some may never reach that due to lack of time and or interest. The more you put into it, the more you get out of it. No matter the field. You are human, ANYTHING you want to learn is within reach. Literally, with Tube here.

  • @wowsuchhandle
    @wowsuchhandle Год назад +2

    This is such rubbish. 10k hours thing is for instruments.

  • @KirosanaPerkele
    @KirosanaPerkele Год назад +18

    Don't prepare for an exam.
    Prepare an exam.
    You will learn a lot more that way.

  • @BadAss_691
    @BadAss_691 Год назад +1

    5.5 hours a day on an average…..gives ~2000 hours a year… so for expertise you need 5 years ,i.e the avg duration of a phd….

  • @fg786
    @fg786 Год назад +23

    But let's face it there are people better suited for this stuff. I have a colleague at work that reads stuff and knows it thereafter like he never did anything else.

    • @RT-eb6vo
      @RT-eb6vo Год назад +7

      Remember the bit about not comparing yourself to others?

    • @chandlerlewis3309
      @chandlerlewis3309 Год назад +11

      There's nothing wrong with not being this way. There's nothing wrong with living an ordinary life. The productivity cult of modern life is a big driver of anxiety and depression.

    • @fg786
      @fg786 Год назад +6

      @@chandlerlewis3309 I salute this comment.
      Sure you can learn stuff, you might even get to a good level of understanding but you will never reach the professional level I reckon.
      Mr. Feynamnn would have probably never made it to the olympics in any sport no matter how hard he trained.
      That's my point.
      Enjoy the learning experience of course.

  • @masterbulgokov
    @masterbulgokov 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hm. Yes, and no to some of this, and I think everyone in the video knows this. IQ is a barrier for certain levels of professions. We can all agree that a profoundly low IQ disqualifies you completely from becoming a neuroscientist, and we can also agree that a person with a slightly above average IQ can, coupled with a TREMENDOUS drive/tenacity/focus can get there. But the person with the IQ 140+ simply has a clearer path to that profession, and it's hard to argue otherwise. Of course, that 140+ IQ may be a lazy shit and that would be a different barrier. My point is that IQ isn't fungible - you can't raise it. If you don't have it, you aren't going to get it.

  • @nobunaga0088
    @nobunaga0088 Год назад +4

    one word :
    INTERESTED.
    Thank you.

  • @bankPO-job-preparation5353
    @bankPO-job-preparation5353 Год назад +1

    0:30 some people still believe in "vaccine causes autism" "moon landing was fake"
    & this guy thinks understanding quantum mechanics is no big deal for ordinary people. 😂😂

  • @curtiscarpenter9881
    @curtiscarpenter9881 Год назад +3

    The Fynmen techique is one of the most underscored methods in rapid skill aqusition and unlearning or altralearning ever.

  • @carlasouza4135
    @carlasouza4135 Год назад +1

    "Durma enquanto eles estudam, e faça tiktok enquanto eles trabalham" NPC Tiktokers 2023

  • @vamastah1737
    @vamastah1737 Год назад +15

    The guy suggesting 4-day work week is stupid because he is not able to finish his work in 7 days per week... well, I guess he does not understand that substantial part of society does so-called bullshit jobs on everyday basis - including me 😂 what simply means I need to go to work to get a paycheck, not to bring any value to the world.

    • @adempc
      @adempc Год назад +2

      He gets that, but he isn't talking about you.

    • @vamastah1737
      @vamastah1737 Год назад +1

      @@adempc I don't think he understands that 4-day workweek is not a solution for scientists or enterprenuers, but for a society as a whole. My situation was just an example, there are multiple people like me (my educated guess would be 30-40% of all employees) around us.

  • @imaginationpictures
    @imaginationpictures 5 месяцев назад +1

    The truth is that time doesn't matter as soon as we get to understand what really matter, the knowledge itself, it's quality over quantity and if someone is able to finish a project within a short deadline, another would need a longer deadline, but the results depends on the quality and devotion each one of them gave to the project. So I disagree when someone in the video says that 10 000 Hours are mandatory. It's just not quantifiale. Ofc hard work is just crucial and essential, we cannot move a rock if we don't move, but time have nothing to do with hardwork. Some work really hard and accomplish outstanding things within a short period of time, and others work really hard and accomplish outstanding things within long periods of time, so time isn't important, it's the work itself and the quality of the work, no matter how much time it takes, that doesn't really matter, that's my point.

  • @gecn9685
    @gecn9685 Год назад +7

    The growth vs fixed mindset

    • @Sean-rr2hj
      @Sean-rr2hj Год назад

      everyone here other than you, found excuses real fucken quick, real fucken quick.

  • @CantTouchMe7
    @CantTouchMe7 6 месяцев назад +1

    This video asks the wrong question. If your goals don't align you wont be able to be obsessed with something. You wont be able to do something at a high level that you don't enjoy. Question your goals first.

  • @prxmiti
    @prxmiti 5 месяцев назад +3

    'hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard.'

  • @danielselli8619
    @danielselli8619 8 месяцев назад +1

    Right, "there is no talent or special miracle ability to understand quantum mechanics" or other things, "that comes without practice, reading, learning and study". But some people did a lot of that in their past lives already.

  • @octavioavila6548
    @octavioavila6548 Год назад +45

    There is talent. There is this thing called cognitive ability which is mostly determined by genetics. No, Mr. Feynman, some people just can't do it

    • @arinnn9289
      @arinnn9289 Год назад

      you a random bozo , you think you're right against feynman who was the smartest man during one point of human history?

    • @Vuora93
      @Vuora93 Год назад +2

      That's speculative

    • @okaforemmanuel4398
      @okaforemmanuel4398 Год назад

      Pls, is it Richard Heyman? Or a different one

    • @keizan5132
      @keizan5132 Год назад +3

      There's absolutely no evidence of such claim nor it even seems to be an educated guess given what we know until today.

    • @joaorebochooaw6321
      @joaorebochooaw6321 11 месяцев назад

      @@keizan5132if you believe innate cognitive ability is a myth you're probably dumb yourself.

  • @neirdakadrien3810
    @neirdakadrien3810 11 месяцев назад +1

    who are these people...?
    Feynman just spoke for 10% of the video, why did you put such a title?....

  • @Thewaytogoheaven
    @Thewaytogoheaven 5 месяцев назад +3

    free Palestine's❤

  • @mariamezzat4647
    @mariamezzat4647 Год назад +1

    If I'm anything which I highly doubt I have made myself so by hard work
    Newton

    • @akpabiomd9970
      @akpabiomd9970 Год назад +1

      Did newton actually make this quote 🤔

  • @MoaazMunir
    @MoaazMunir 4 месяца назад +4

    I studied hard, succeded, failed multiple times, learned smart work is way better, what is life without a few hurdles!? I did pre-engineering in intermediate, shifted towards management later on! Did bachelors in finance! At the end learned that praying and reading the Quran is the key! Rest takes care of itself by the will of God!

    • @deepakrajj0
      @deepakrajj0 3 месяца назад +1

      So irrational thoughts despite being educated

  • @cryptovadkan7496
    @cryptovadkan7496 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great! Please someone like my comment so I get notification and come back here regurarly! "Scar tissue" really got me ! Especially after you happen to fail many times, you learn how not to learn and what not to learn, and that' OK! Everyone has their own path. Don't compare yourself to anyone. Only to yourself. Wish you a good life

  • @muER76
    @muER76 6 месяцев назад +4

    I have 15.000 hours. In Fornite

    • @Bojackyy
      @Bojackyy 5 месяцев назад +1

      Wasted time gj

  • @kathilroyal3554
    @kathilroyal3554 11 месяцев назад +1

    i putted 10,000 h in League of legends and im not expert im hardstuck in diamond, nobody knows me, so this video is fake

  • @iamkumarmihir
    @iamkumarmihir Год назад +4

    Hard Work brings success and satisfaction in life❤🙏

    • @FHi349
      @FHi349 10 месяцев назад

      Not without intelligence. If low IQ and work requires intellectual firepower then no hard work in the world will matter

  • @TheBloatLord
    @TheBloatLord 11 месяцев назад +1

    Complete BS I have 10000 hours in Dota 2 and I'm still just about legend

  • @tonynunez6539
    @tonynunez6539 9 месяцев назад +4

    No amount of hard work can make you a major league baseball player if you don't have the talent. No one can stidy hard enough to win a Nobel Prize if they don't have the talent. Hard work can only get you so far.

    • @falcodarkzz
      @falcodarkzz 8 месяцев назад

      H'es not talking about a nobel prize. He said can anyone understand Quantum Mechanics and become a scientist, provided they study hard. The fact is most people can contribute to science if they really want to

  • @АлександарЈовановић-ъ6н

    A king is not born but self made.
    The stars are not far away but people are too small.

  • @AryanBhole563
    @AryanBhole563 Год назад +3

    Clickbait

  • @bakarlabib
    @bakarlabib 3 месяца назад +1

    Your Videos Are Engaging, But I've Always Found A Special Charm In Content Without Background Music. It Allows For A Different Level Of Connection With The Creator. Keep Up The Good Work!