Get your brain in motion

Tag: curiosity

Learning to learn

Sometimes “the ability to learn faster than your competitors may be the only sustainable competitive advantage”, says Arie de Geus, a business theorist.

Neverthless Learning to do something we are not familiar with requires a willingness to experiment that is common in children but quite discomforting for most of us.

In this article Erika Andersen identifies four attributes which characterise the process of Learning:

  1. Aspiration
  2. Self-awareness
  3. Curiosity
  4. Vulnerability

The author discusses some mental tools which can boost these attributes and help us in learning to learn.

Read more here.

Image source: Pxhere – Public Domain

 

Never stop exploring

Because it’s there

These are the “three most famous words in mountaineering”, as they have been defined.

In 1923, George Herbert Mallory – an English climber – was traveling through the States to get new sponsors for his third attempt to climb Mount Everest and when he was asked by a journalist “Why climb Mt. Everest?” he promptly replied with these few and iconic words.

Mountaineering can be hardly considered just a sport: it is indeed a cultural activity, that implies huge philosophical and ethical questions. On the philosophy and ethics of mountaineering a lot of literature has been produced, in many languages. The core question is always: “why?” and to this question a number of different answers have been given. No one is satisfactory by itself.

People climb mountains to challenge (the others, their own limits, the natural hurdles), to improve (physically or mentally), to leave for a while our chaotic towns, our crowded lives, our angst-filled works, etc.

In any case, there is an inevitable dimension in mountaineering: you must take your backpack, wear your boots and go gasping on a path or on a wall. Mountaineering requires efforts. To what end? To go somewhere.

That’s what mountaineering is: exploration. It is just a founding pillar of human behaviour: curiosity. Anyone can, climbing mountains, go beyond their personal “pillars of Hercules”.

Curiosity and exploration often challenge the rational behaviour, but they are a powerful engine for human development.

So, do follow your curiosity, your willingness to explore a new space. And if anyone would question you “why?”, don’t worry, you already have the answer: “because it is there”.

The Giant's Tooth, Mont Blanc (Italian side)

The Giant’s Tooth on the Mont Blanc, Italian side (photo by the Author, from Flickr)