Where are the polymaths?
The polymath brain - image created via DALL-E

Where are the polymaths?

According to Hindu mythology, human beings will become shorter and shorter as the yugas (epochs) go by. For instance, in Treta Yuga, humans were supposed to be 8 feet tall; and by Kali Yuga, they are supposed to have shrunk to 6 feet, and will keep on shrinking as this yuga progresses.


Set the mythology aside for a moment and mull over the achievements per human over the last 700 years. You will be tempted to conclude that we have truly shrunk in that area.

Consider these women and men, most from a few hundred years ago:?Leonardo da Vinci,?Hypatia,?Mary Somerville, Maria Sibylla Merian,?Al-Biruni, Ibn al-Haytham, Jagadish Chandra Bose, Rabindranath Tagore, Alan Turing, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and Linus Pauling. These humans were among the rarest of rare human subspecies - the polymath.

Each of these names made significant contributions to at least three completely different fields, which according to Waqas Ahmed, the British author of the 2018 book, "The Polymath", is the definition of a polymath. For instance, Leonardo da Vinci, whose name we recall first when we hear the word polymath, made noteworthy contributions as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor and architect! Hypatia, his senior by over 1,000 years, was a philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician.


You may have noticed that in our age, we are bereft of such polymaths. Why is this so, do you wonder? I have a hypothesis that rests on 3 points:

a. The concepts of focus and specialisation are the enemies of polymathism. As with everything else that?we celebrate today, focus may have benefits. But?focus is overrated. By definition, it means a narrowing. Not a widening. Blinkers are great if you're a horse and your rider needs?you to be kept on the straight and narrow and not be distracted. But you have to decide whether you are a horse and are meant to be ridden by someone else. If you fancy yourself a human being of free will and polymath dreams, then curiosity and distractibility?are your friends.

Distractibility has been made out to be an evil thing. It is not. Academics who have studied his life have inferred that Leonardo da Vinci had ADHD. They say that he switched “from task to task,” worked continuously throughout the night, sleeping rarely and “alternating rapid cycles of short naps and waking”. He famously took 14 years to finish the Mona Lisa, because there was no way he could sit at one task in a dedicated manner. All signs of a neurodivergent and chronodiverse brain. And yet, he is among the most prolific geniuses to have ever walked this planet.

b. We have been demonising attention-deficit, training people to focus more and trying to treat ADHD. When instead, we ought to be encouraging people with such neurodiverse?brains to indulge themselves and discover everything that they want to. This, I believe, is part of the reason why we don't see polymaths emerging in our age.

c. Waqas Ahmed also points out calls out "the cult of specialisation" and draws our attention to education systems that stifle polymathic nature by forcing learners to specialise in narrow topics. I'm inclined to agree; schools have for several decades forced children to choose science versus art versus commerce. How about schools that encourage kids to choose zoology, art, economics and drama?

Author Robert Heinlein once wrote: "A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyse a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects."


Understanding Polymathy:

Now many of us may be tempted to look at this and say, "Hey, I have multiple interests too. I paint and run and bake and write. I'm a polymath too!" For you, I have this to offer: Chemist, author and art collector,?Carl Djerassi says:?“Nowadays people that are called polymaths are dabblers in many different areas. I aspire to be an intellectual polygamist. And I deliberately use that metaphor to provoke with its sexual allusion and to point out the real difference to me between polygamy and promiscuity.?To me, promiscuity is a way of flitting around. Polygamy, serious polygamy, is where you have various marriages and each of them is important. And in the ideal polygamy I suspect there’s no number one wife and no number six wife. You have a deep connection with each person.

Consider da Vinci's serious involvement with painting, writing, designing buildings and inventions, and you will notice that the involvement represents not a mere dabbling.

Also... Why is it important that the fields of achievement be distinct and that they be fields of study? Because otherwise, bodybuilder, actor, businessman and politician Arnold Schwarzneggar would be considered a polymath. Has he made noteworthy achievements in four fields? Yes. Is he a da Vinci or a Tagore? Ahem, no! Which is why traditionally, businesspeople are not included in polymath lists. Business is not a discipline. Also, businesses have traditionally over-valued specialisation and focus, and are therefore inherently anti-polymath.

Waqas Ahmed's book argues that "specialisation encouraged by the production lines of the Industrial Revolution is counter-productive both to the individual and wider society. It suggests that the complex problems of the 21st century need the versatility, creativity, and broad perspectives characteristic of polymaths."

There have been a few people who have diverse interests and they end up creating things that aren't just functionally useful, but also socially important or beautiful. Steve Jobs' interest in calligraphy and art led to the development of fonts on the personal computer and to attractive devices like the iPod. Richard Branson's interests in music, media, aviation and space exploration have led him to found companies such as Virgin Music, Virgin Media, Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Galactic. Certainly the world can use CFO's who are also sociologists and psychologists and engineers who are also climatologists and artists. Just imagine what we could change if people were like that!



Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymath#Waqas_Ahmed

https://www.cnn.com/style/article/leonardo-da-vinci-adhd-scli-intl

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competent_man

https://www.the-polymath.com/the-last-days-of-the-polymath-the-economist/




Aman works in leadership, talent and organisation development, teaches positive psychology at the TISS-ODA ODCP and coaches professionals on their strengths. His?attentionally-challenged?brain rejects the idea of single-minded focus and indulges his multiple interests such as history, archaeology, anthropology and paleontology. He spends his spare time on Wikipedia and has even taught a course on dinosaurs.



Shubhra Bajaj

Assistant Professor in English |

1 年

Glad I came across your article today ! Truly motivating ! Relieved to read and figure out that I am not a dabbler (as often labelled) . But moving forward trying to quench my thirst for various disciplines, I have found myself questioning whether it is practically possible to be a polymath in the present scenario in a tier 2/3 city with bills to pay and frames to fit in.As a doctorate professional in literature and a founder of nutrition and diabetes initiative , It feels great to be skilled in two fields but if greatness ( financial and social) is not achieved in either or both of them you risk losing them both. Would love your take on this Aman Zaidi

Vinay Singhal

Business Transformation Strategist

1 年

Aman ZaidiFew universities have started the concept of liberal arts where all students have to select one subject from various disciplines. So a fashion design student has to take one subject each out of Management, law, mathematics, journalism, bioscience, architecture, etc. Unfortunately, the hype is just getting created to follow in line with Western universities. In terms of getting it understood by students is far from reality. What is the reason? Society and here comes parents. If parents themselves have the linear mindset of doctors and engineers and would seldom encourage this multitasking at home, it will be difficult. Moreover, let's be liberal at all levels. Ask me being in Finance, will I hire an engineer in my team? Largely no. But I have experimented and found success. It is because the brain needs fun. A monotonous task for the brain is very boring. Hence Polymath should be a way forward right from childhood. HR managers should experiment on this because unless they start experimenting or accepting this instinctive talent of the brain, the breed coming out of college will remain monochrome.

Oscar Venhuis

Business Designer | Visiting Professor at Sino-German Research Institute of Brand Sciences | Art Podcaster

1 年

A: it appears all the polymaths are hiding at our weekly Dialogic Drinks.

Prashanth Angani

Founder at Spotalpha

1 年

Thanks for sharing this. Several good points including discussion on achievements of Steve Jobs and Richard Branson. One point I would like to add is that media coverage is mostly limited to politicians (Putin) and ultra wealthy businessmen (Elon Musk). There might be several polymaths, perhaps even some with ADHD, who are just not receiving media attention!

Punit Modhgil

Entrepreneur - from bootstrapped to successful exits | Marketer loved deeply madly by Sales | Publisher (???????) of Books in Indian Languages | Career multiplier guide One Life Do More. This is where I come in.

1 年

It is not mythology, it is traditions and history. Would you say Christian mythology and Islamic mythology? If yes we are on the same page. Else it reflects a certain bias. And prejudice.

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