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Expertise Quotes

Quotes tagged as "expertise" Showing 1-30 of 142
Werner Heisenberg
“An expert is someone who knows some of the worst mistakes that can be made in his subject, and how to avoid them.”
Werner Heisenberg

Nassim Nicholas Taleb
“The curious mind embraces science; the gifted and sensitive, the arts; the practical, business; the leftover becomes an economist”
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, The Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms

Nassim Nicholas Taleb
“Suckers think that you cure greed with money, addiction with substances, expert problems with experts, banking with bankers, economics with economists, and debt crises with debt spending”
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, The Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms

Glenn Greenwald
“Incestuous, homogeneous fiefdoms of self-proclaimed expertise are always rank-closing and mutually self-defending, above all else.”
Glenn Greenwald

Eddie Robson
“Would it make you feel better if I pretended not to be making it up as I go along? [...] In that case, I know exactly what I'm doing, but please don't ask me about it in any great detail.”
Eddie Robson, Doctor Who Unbound: Masters of War

Charles Dickens
“Dickens writes that one of his characters, "listened to everything without seeming to, which showed he understood his business.”
Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist

“Skills are common. Talent is rare.”
Colin Clark

Amit Kalantri
“Experts were once amateurs who kept practicing.”
Amit Kalantri, Wealth of Words

“Good luck belongs to those who know how and are not afraid." John Hay to President Theodore Roosevelt”
John Taliaferro, All the Great Prizes : The Life of John Hay, from Lincoln to Roosevelt

“Don’t limit yourself, discover new areas of expertise”
Sunday Adelaja

“Your calling is you unique area of expertise”
Sunday Adelaja

Emma Törzs
“Joanna had always known that there was quite a lot she didn't understand about the world, about the books, about her parents and their history. But when the physical and emotional boundaries of one's life were small, when one had walked every inch of one's allotted space many times over, it was easy to forget ignorance and feel a sort of mastery, instead. This house, that path, those books, that mountain; Joanna was used to being the expert and used to the safety that came with expertise.”
Emma Törzs, Ink Blood Sister Scribe

Richie Norton
“What is the difference between coaching, consulting, and training?
Coaching is personal.
Consulting is an expertise shared (generally) with an organization.
Training is for the many.”
Richie Norton

Steven Magee
“Hypobaric therapy for treating human disorders is one of my many areas of expertise.”
Steven Magee

Steven Magee
“I had been hired to manage the Desoto Solar Farm due to my expertise in troubleshooting solar photovoltaic farms. When my expertise uncovered it was incorrectly built and was dangerous, I became a pariah in the company.”
Steven Magee

“The sampling period is not incidental to the development of great performers—something to be excised in the interest of a head start—it is integral.”
David Epstein

“The saddest thing about "know-it-alls" and/or "closed minded people" is not their ignorance, but that they are basically admitting they have maximized their potential. These people are the antithesis of the expert or master, who as a direct result of their knowledge knows they do not know everything, so strives to learn more.”
Frank D. Prestia

“Projects need to be interdisciplinary in order to fully utilize every available expertise.”
Dr. Lucas D. Shallua

“AI is set to universalize the access to intellectual tools that otherwise require years of study, training and practice.”
Mukesh Borar, The Secrets of AI: a Math-Free Guide to Thinking Machines

Abhijit Naskar
“Sonnet 1106

When an expert doesn't know something,
They say, "I don't know", without tricks.
But an armchair intellectual knows it all,
Tiktok and Insta are their clinics.

An expert's worth remains the same,
with or without Tiktok and Insta.
Armchair intellectuals are here today gone tomorrow,
with the tiniest algorithm change of social media.

My work will continue,
with or without social media.
My work will continue,
with or without internet.
My work will continue,
with or without electricity even,
so will the work of every expert sapiens.

Instant popularity vanishes just as instantly,
Today you are relevant, tomorrow you are gone.
Make a real contribution that isn't overshadowed
by the next big tech revolution.”
Abhijit Naskar, Vande Vasudhaivam: 100 Sonnets for Our Planetary Pueblo

“In removing the conductor, I presumed that I did not need him, that I could do his job, that any set of whimsically concocted guidelines could replace his expertise. Without the conductor, there was no room for me to feel bad when I failed to meet any superimposed standards. There was also no guidance, no voice to inform me of imminent danger or to save me from it, no one to help me correct my path or understand what was going on around me, and why.”
Michael J Heil, Pursued: God’s relentless pursuit and a drug addict’s journey to finding purpose

Ezra Pound
“Pisanello painted horses so that one remembers the painting, and the Duke of Milan sent him to Bologna to BUY horses. Why a similar kind of 'horse sense' can't be applied in the study of literature is, and has always been, beyond my comprehension. Pisanello had to LOOK at the horses. You would think that anyone wanting to know about poetry would do one of two things or both. I.E. LOOK AT it or listen to it. He might even think about it? And if he wanted advice he would go to someone who KNEW something about it.”
Ezra Pound, ABC of Reading

Thomas Sowell
“Even where the experts are untrammeled, what “all the expertsâ€� are most likely to agree on is the need for using expertise to deal with problems.”
Thomas Sowell, Intellectuals and Society

Susan Cain
“In a now-famous experiment, he and his colleagues compared three groups of expert violinists at the elite Music Academy in West Berlin. The researchers asked the professors to divide the students into three groups: the “best violinists,â€� who had the potential for careers as international soloists; the “good violinistsâ€�; and a third group training to be violin teachers rather than performers. Then they interviewed the musicians and asked them to keep detailed diaries of their time. They found a striking difference among the groups. All three groups spent the same amount of time—over fifty hours a weekâ€� participating in music-related activities. All three had similar classroom requirements making demands on their time. But the two best groups spent most of their music-related time practicing in solitude: 24.3 hours a week, or 3.5 hours a day, for the best group, compared with only 9.3 hours a week, or 1.3 hours a day, for the worst group. The best violinists rated “practice aloneâ€� as the most important of all their music-related activities. Elite musicians—even those who perform in groups—describe practice sessions with their chamber group as “leisureâ€� compared with solo practice, where the real work gets done. Ericsson and his cohorts found similar effects of solitude when they studied other kinds of expert performers. “Serious study aloneâ€� is the strongest predictor of skill for tournament-rated chess players, for example; grandmasters typically spend a whopping five thousand hours—almost five times as many hours as intermediatelevel players—studying the game by themselves during their first ten years of learning to play. College students who tend to study alone learn more over time than those who work in groups. Even elite athletes in team sports often spend unusual amounts of time in solitary practice. What’s so magical about solitude? In many fields, Ericsson told me, it’s only when you’re alone that you can engage in Deliberate Practice, which he has identified as the key to exceptional achievement. When you practice deliberately, you identify the tasks or knowledge that are just out of your reach, strive to upgrade your performance, monitor your progress, and revise accordingly. Practice sessions that fall short of this standard are not only less useful—they’re counterproductive. They reinforce existing cognitive mechanisms instead of improving them. Deliberate Practice is best conducted alone for several reasons. It takes intense concentration, and other people can be distracting. It requires deep motivation, often self-generated. But most important, it involves working on the task that’s most challenging to you personally. Only when you’re alone, Ericsson told me, can you “go directly to the part that’s challenging to you. If you want to improve what you’re doing, you have to be the one who generates the move. Imagine a group class—you’re the one generating the move only a small percentage of the time.â€� To see Deliberate Practice in action, we need look no further than the story of Stephen Wozniak. The Homebrew meeting was the catalyst that inspired him to build that first PC, but the knowledge base and work habits that made it possible came from another place entirely: Woz had deliberately practiced engineering ever since he was a little kid. (Ericsson says that it takes approximately ten thousand hours of Deliberate Practice to gain true expertise, so it helps to start young.)”
Susan Cain, Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking

“When we feel insecure, why do we allow ourselves to forget our expertise? You know what you know, and you can carry those skills no matter where you go, into uncomfortable terrain. Limits are removed, results are open, and failure ceases to exist.”
Tunde Oyeneyin, Speak: Find Your Voice, Trust Your Gut, and Get from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be

Abhijit Naskar
“Opinion on everything, expert in nothing.”
Abhijit Naskar, The Humanitarian Dictator

Abhijit Naskar
“Analyze like a scientist, plot like a politician, execute like a soldier. Don't expose your faculties, unless absolutely necessary - better sober pretending drunk, than drunk pretending sober.”
Abhijit Naskar, Visvavictor: Kanima Akiyor Kainat

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“To own nothing is to be owned by nothing.”
Dan Sanker, Collaborate: The Art of We

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