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Monday, January 2, 2017

On Reading self-help books

When I first started working, an older and wiser co-worker told me: “There are two ways to do things: one is the way they tell you how to do it, written or otherwise and then there is the way that things get done right.”
I have kept that in my mind and it has more of less rings true. There have been circumstances, miracles of all miracles, where the two ways coincide and we get a cosmic convergence of disparate minds, but that’s not often.
What brings this up is that I have been reading a number of books written to show the masses how to be creative, how does innovation occur, how to be gritty and resilient, how to be happy, how change our mindset, how to cope with the technology invading our world, and all of the other things that are complicating/enabling our lives. These books are generally written by journalists or economists, or university researchers. They are categorized as either leadership books, psychology books, business books, or self-help books.
They all share a structure though. The book and indeed, each chapter may start with a pithy quote which may or may not be pertinent to the chapter, but it is there. The quotes are usually coming from someone famous who has the gravitas to give purpose to the chapter with their really deep thoughts.
The book starts with a declaration that is supposed to be evocative if not mind expanding. The author would mark his territory; define his problem, the parameters, and the constraints. He would also throw in a bunch of stories which would seemingly give proof to his claims. The stories would be humorous but meaningful at the same time. Some authors would go for the anecdotal approach: great stories without much data. Some would go deep into their research and give you a lot of data, and if they are good scientists and researchers, they would also provide caveats and forewarnings about assumptions.
Support and argumentation would proceed in this way through a number of chapters laying down a recipe or formula: point, anecdote and/or data, another point, more anecdote and/or data, and so on. In the end there would be a summary and a unification of all the deep thoughts all boiled down into an easy to follow, no thinking required on the part of the reader. The promise is that whichever problem the book is supposed to resolve is so simple, so uncomplicated that a simple sequence of if-then scenarios could resolve all situations that may come. Just like the premise I started with: there is a documented solution.
In real life, we figure out what to do and how to do it. Sometimes we need to do this because the known wisdom is insufficient and confusing. Sometimes it is inadequate, but sometimes it is because human ingenuity just won’t take the status quo for granted and sometimes people come up with much better solutions by going away from the status quo.
For me that is the road less traveled, injection of human curiosity and critical thinking and solving things by the seat of the pants, an experiential approach is usually the most effective.
Indeed there is something to be said for having a reference book ready to list the best practices, but I would argue that most of these books are by and large not a list of best practices. They are a list of what people believe to be best practices and most are just people throwing stuff out. Even those who have a basis with data and documented successes, the authors don’t go into far enough depth in their explanation of their thinking to warn of the potholes along the way. Some of these omissions come from the fact that you don’t know what you don’t know and you can’t anticipate everything. Yet some omissions are more insidious: they don’t want their claims weakened or invalidated AND those careful caveats don’t sell books.

I still read those books, I am not cynical enough to ignore the possibilities available that comes from unorthodox thinking. But I do it with a very jaundiced eye. I bring to the task of reading these books with the eyes of a technical reviewer for engineering papers. 

Sunday, October 9, 2016

The Jazz of Physics By Stephon Alexander

This was a book that I was looking forward to reading. Two words caught my fancy: Physics and Jazz.
Alexander is an accomplished physicist and a working musician. He was fascinated by both parts of his life when he was a child and managed to be able to do quite well in both spheres as an adult. He was able to convey his own natural attraction and obsession to both physics and jazz in a very natural and passionate way. He does an excellent job in eliciting in me a corresponding response in me that was as natural and passionate as his.
His intent is to present the advanced physics that he is working on as an academic as being analogous to the jazz improvisations that he is working on as a gigging jazz musician. Unfortunately, he was much less successful.
My own expertise in both physics and jazz are skin deep at best. Physics being more naturally aligned with my engineering training, while jazz is limited by scant my musical background. So it would seem to be natural that his explanations of the physics would be easier for me to comprehend, it wasn’t. In fact the musical analogies that he explained made much more sense that his explanations of physics.  As I slogged through the explanations, I wondered about the more general audience, whether they were having as difficult of a time as I was.
The center motif that he presented at the beginning of the book involved John Coltrane’s mandala in which Coltrane was trying to create a connection with his own very original musical expressions with the evolution of modern physics during that time. Coltrane worshiped Einstein and his ideas, for example.  According to Alexander, Coltrane’s last three albums were his own experimentation with the mathematical ideas that Einstein had speculated upon.
Taking inspiration from arguably the most prominent minds of their era, in completely disparate areas of achievement, Alexander decided to work on both simultaneously. Of course, this was not a conscious choice, he had been foundering in his physics career since physics had become a calculators domain with the mathematics heavy emphasis on the superstring theory.

Indeed, Alexander employed the method of no method, or the idea of wu-wei to use jazz as a means of training his mind in a way that perhaps the jazz could elicit some original ideas in his physics. By the accounts in the book, he was indeed successful in doing good physics while also playing some good jazz. What he failed to do in the book however, was cogently leading us through his maze of twin spheres of influence and the complexity contained therein with each one. While he did a very admirable job trying to explain himself, I suspect that the culprit is more the complexity of the subjects rather than his familiarity with both subjects. Indeed, the book would be 100 times longer if he had indeed taken care to explain the minutiae of the two subjects. His hope of using analogy rather than detailed explanations to convey his message was somewhat successful but also somewhat a failure. But no matter, because the book did a great job of creating an ethos of what he was trying to convey, and there was a denouement of sorts toward the end. I will never listen to Coltrane again, and I will now understand a little bit better what all the fuss about modern physics  is in regard, so I can say that I learned something new.