Why The Era of Polymaths is Here
Varsha Krishnani
Founder & CEO at Amazzzing.com | Deseos App | Fuerteventura Startups | Fuerteventura Times
"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, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects," once said Robert A. Heinlein in this famous quote.
I can say today that I′ve done all of the above except butchering a hog, however, in my earlier career years my multiskilled capabilities were often misinterpreted by the traditionalist white collars as "Jack of All, Master of None" or "too qualified" or "you have so many skills, where do we fit you in one" or "what is your specialization?" Still, over the last 13 years of my career, I have learned an additional "excess of skills". From failing at running a wine manufacturing unit at 19 to successfully founding global intellectual properties in music, wine, hospitality, festivals. From trading million-dollar diamonds across Asia & Middle East to negotiating how manufacturing plants can implement robotic technology when at sea to reduce spillovers. From leading a hospitality business for a Michelin star chef in Beijing to securing a government fund for my tech start-up while on vacation. From riding 5000 kilometers across India to walking 1000km from France to Spain. I have today, with all these experiences, encompassed a much fuller life, which is instead leading me in directions of my deepest desires and aiding in fulfillment of my lifelong dreams. It became important for me to share my experiences and reinstate the fact that having multiple capabilities is indeed the way to unlock many parts of your self, and eventually, the world that would not have been possible if we did not have the courage to experiment the new. To be more, to do more than what we already are. To spread this message, I have started a weekly series on "Polymaths" for FuerteventuraTimes.com. Here is my first of the weekly segment.
While sticking to one thing has its charm, why then more and more people are choosing to diversify their capabilities today and be a polymath themselves? To understand, let us learn where the idea of polymath first initiated in human history.
Renaissance Humanism
The Rennaissance period that spread across Europe during the 14th, 15th, and 16th century is considered the birthplace of polymaths. Often considered as the transition from the Middle Ages to Modernity in European history, the Rennaissance period based its movement on the intellectual principles of humanism.
Humanism is a word derived from the concept of Roman Humanitas– a Latin term meaning human nature, civilization, and kindness, often has its roots in enlightenment. The concept of Roman Humanitas was created to define the code of conduct of being a Roman, which highly corresponded to the Greek theories of philanthr?pía– meaning loving what makes us human and paideia– meaning education.
Controversial statements for those times such as “Man is the measure of all things” by Greek philosopher Protagoras along with the thought of creating a world where the citizens were a combined excellence of their “mind, body and soul” was the basis of Renaissance Humanism.
Not confined to the elite, but rather a cultural movement aimed to evoke the best in human beings, the Renaissance Humanism focused on building citizens as people who were eloquent with a diversity of skills, like writing, speech, art, poetry, and philosophy, thus making them capable citizens to engage within communities and persuading others to follow the path of total excellence. Therefore, creating a societal legacy of culture, morals, and philosophy.
A man or woman who encompassed this diversity of skills and abilities was then known as the Renaissance person. Leonard Da Vinci is often considered as a Renaissance man as he was not only an accomplished painter producing historic oil paintings like the Monalisa or The Last Supper, but he also was a mathematician, a musician, an engineer, a writer, an anatomist, an architect, a sculptor, and an inventor, where his concepts included early traces of a helicopter, a tank, a calculator, a parachute, a robot, a telephone, evolution, and solar power. Such a person is known as a Renaissance man or woman encompassing multiple skills is known as a polymath.
What happened next?
Towards the beginning of the 16th century, many wars across Spain, Germany, and Italy combined with the censorship of artists and writers by the Catholic church led to the downfall of the Renaissance Humanism movement. Considered as too bold and too creative for social wellbeing, the Renaissance thinkers were often punished for being too intelligent.
With changing trade routes, and prolonged wars, there was a noticeable decline in the amount of money spent on things that were not basic human needs of food, shelter, and clothing. Wealthy contributors and supporters who propelled the Renaissance Humanism movement no more spent on arts, poetry, architecture, music, or inventions. This was the end of the Humanitas movement.
A More Recent Human History
Moving forward to the recent human history of the 19th century, facing plagues, depressions, and world wars, arts and skills were the last thing on the minds of collective societies. Learning and growth were all confined to the physical environment and physical reach which was mainly defined by their economic capabilities. However today, with the ease of access to any information, knowledge, and even wisdom at a click of a button, the Renaissance Humanism is slowly making its way back into modern-day society. Entrepreneur Elon Musk and his multiple ventures across diverse fields along with the fandom propelled in being so by the press have evoked the sheer will across many young people across the world to be a polymath themselves.
The Human Nature
It is an intrinsic human quality to grow. Wanting to be more than what one is. No matter how enlightened one is, or non-capitalistic even, every human being′s innate essence is to do what they do best, to be more than who they are. The entire life is a battlefield process between the mind and oneself, passing each lesson of growth and learning, one step at a time. And at times, many steps are repeated because of lessons not already learned. While some human beings have the luxury of an emotionally, financially, mentally, and physically secure environment around them to process this learning and pass their life lessons with more ease, many face innumerable hindrances that interfere with their learning or clearing of their life lessons. Hindrances of family expectations, their own social beliefs, economic means, and even an inferiority complex inflicted by society because of their constant comparison of their lives with the ideal ones touted by media and celebrities. When one′s most basic growth or realization of self conflicts, how can one then diversify into multitudes of abilities and even think of being a polymath?
The Foundation of A Polymath
Here is when I contradict the above statement and would like to emphasize that a polymath′s capabilities and journey are not suppressed by their environment and economic stature in life, but rather augmented and extracted to their best, because of their environment and surroundings.
Let me give you my own example.
When I was seven years old, my class was assigned a science project at school with the topic- “Endangered Species and What We Can do To Protect Them from Extinction.” My family had put all their resources in getting me a good education, therefore the school I went to was expensive ( the traditional equivalent to good education) and my school friends came in BMWs and Rovers and had a lot of expensive project help. Almost everyone from my class went to the same fancy bookstore to buy the same readymade charts of “Endangered Species” driven by their chauffeurs.
When the submission day arrived, ninety percent of the projects looked identical with the same pictures from the same “high-profile & glossy” Endangered Species chart, with almost no personal thought or understanding of the main topic of extinction and protection. Let′s say most of the projects presented were a traditional form of cut, copy, and paste. However, it was my project that stood out and won the prize.
What did I do differently?
As we could not afford a $20 throwaway on a sheet of paper because of our financial conditions, my mother took me to an old newspaper & scrap shop where all newspapers, magazines, books were given away from the neighborhood offices, libraries, and homes for recycling. Newspapers for more than 10 years. Magazines of science, astronomy, nature, philosophy, and history from over a decade. A fortnight before the project, every evening my mother would go for her evening walk and yoga class, and drop me at the old paper and scrap shop. Every evening after school, I not only poured myself into knowledge that was way beyond just understanding endangered species but also developed my ability to think originally, empathically, and present a measurable solution as well combining my thoughts of all.
My project was on display for the entire school as it didn’t have a readymade chart with images, but an applied thought, understanding, and because of the exposure to the ocean of information at the old newspaper & scrap shop, it empowered me with the gift of creativity. Creativity that came from browsing and reading a decade-old material on not just endangered species, but nature, astronomy, earth, and its formation, decades of extinctions and their reasoning. My project didn’t have goody-two-shoe photos of cute dinosaurs that have been extinct with a sticker of their name pasted below their glossy picture cut-out. It had history and reasons for their extinctions with a compilation of real solutions from over a decade, a proof of real movements by activists, and the naked real truth about what we need to see.
What I learned with this early experience was not how to make a creative project from an old newspaper & scrap shop, but how to process multiple combinations of different pieces of information and creatively connect them to one cohesive whole. That was my foundation to being a polymath, where early on I made the best from what I had available to me, to present the best of my cohesive whole. In this case, I made the best from waste, literally. Since then there′s been no stopping. I have almost worked in every industry, strive to excel at multiple passions, and thoroughly enjoy it as well.
While this story can prove that to be a polymath, one′s lack of economic means may not be a hindrance but a tool to being one. According to a recent study of 2018, it is proven that family and financial resources influence the emergency of polymathy.
What makes a polymath?
A George Washington University doctoral dissertation conducted by Angela J. Cotellessa- “In Pursuit of Polymaths: Understanding Renaissance Persons of the 21st Century” is an extraordinary study focusing on the life experiences of modern-day polymaths. Her research focused on accomplished polymaths with careers spanning across the arts, business, and sciences. The participants provided insights regarding their development and lives as polymaths (Cotellessa, 2018). Seven conclusions were drawn from this research that make a polymath
(1) To be a polymath, one must accept not fitting in the typical box and perhaps even
Project Lead SCM/MFG Offshore Onsite CoOrdination at Fujitsu Consulting India
4 年That was an honest post and today I learnt that I am a POLYMATH too. The corporate world sees this vast knowledge of our as en excuse to deny us presence, that has not come as surprise to me as being jack of all has its disadvantages as I learn later, as my colleagues with just one but full knowledge survived well and better than me. Being a POLYMATH is a satisfaction we get if we do not CONSIDER ECONOMICAL DISADVANTAGE of it. I may fit the bill too w.r.to being a POLYMATH there. That's why I can connect. Thanks
I study the correlation between things for a more liveable world
4 年All good Advertising folks are polymaths. I am blessed to have walked the hallowed halls of the business... thank you for sharing.