Boidhre wrote:Talent is definitely used as excuse by people, that doesn't mean it doesn't exist though!
We're not born equal. You and I do not have the same "ceilings" when it comes to most things I imagine. Be it physical things like weight lifting or mental things like the ability to memorise long lists of digits. It's simply not the case that if we both work hard at something we'll get there if we set very high goals (and the discussion is about being exceptional at something not merely very good). I mean, I cannot say that if I worked hard for ten years at go, say 30 hours a week, that I'd definitely be at least EGF 6d on the rating table at the end of it. I really, could not say that given any amount of hours or time to do it in. Life is fundamentally unfair, we can't achieve anything we want unless what we want is very pedestrian.
I didn't want to say that talent does not exist, I was merely stating the point that talent is more often than not used as an excuse. As I said, in my opinion real talent is the difference between Go Seigen and other 9-dan professionals. At this level talent plays a major role, below that there is no substitute for hard work and dedication - in my opinion ; )
Then I agree that we are not born equal, a world of twins would surely be a odd place to live. But I disagree that we could not reach the same things when we would be _raised_ the same and have the same passion for the same field of study. I don't have scientific data or anything, that is just my belief : ) (Though I like to take Puma and Adidas as an example, which were founded by brothers who had a disagreement in their first company or the brothers Sean "Day[9]" and Nick "Tasteless" Plott, who made it both in the e-Sports-scene escpecially in StarCraft.)
I also don't believe in "ceilings", for me the entire human history speaks against such a thing. The one thing you maybe can call a "ceiling" is your lifespan, quite hard to exceed that ; )
Last but not least, people are unfair, life is not. Life is the result of your choices and how you like to see things, your perception of things.
To quote David Foster Wallace:
There are these two young fish swimming along and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says "Morning, boys. How's the water?" And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes "What the hell is water?"
Full essay at http://web.archive.org/web/200802130824 ... ement.html - highly recommended : )
And we can achieve anything we want, if we want =)