Worklife

Ramblings about workplace culture, life in Japan, and then some.

Worklife success

Jan 30, 2006 22:29 pm / Add a comment

After accu­mu­lat­ing the writ­ings for Work­life, I real­ize the pur­pose of these writ­ings are to help the reader see that in cre­ation of work­place or for any work­life, suc­cess lies in peo­ple fac­tor and those people’s wills, actions, and chain of lit­tle inci­dents both good and bad. We read and study the­o­ries, meth­ods and tech­niques, but in real­ity, over­whelm­ing major­ity of them come after things “hap­pen”. Do not be pre­oc­cu­pied with knowl­edge. Do not be swept away by cre­ativ­ity. Remem­ber that we are human beings with the same phys­i­ol­ogy as the cave­man days, with same set of emo­tions as Egyp­tians who built pyra­mids, Romans who ruled, Arabs who told sto­ries, Chi­nese who invented fire­works, etc., etc.

These exam­ples are far out. What trig­gered me to think of this is another glance at pages of A Beau­ti­ful Mind this afternoon.

The cat­a­lyst for Princeton’s trans­for­ma­tion into a world cap­i­tal of math­mat­ics and the­o­ret­i­cal physics was an acci­dent — an acci­dent of friend­ship. Woodrow Wil­son, like most other edu­cated Amer­i­cans in his time, despised math­mat­ics, com­plain­ing that “the nat­ural man inevitably rebels agains math­mat­ics, a mild form of tor­ture that could only be learned by painful processes of drill.” And math­mat­ics played no role what­ever in his vision of Prince­ton as a real uni­ver­sity with a grad­u­ate col­lege and a sys­tem of instruc­tions that empha­sized sem­i­nars and dis­cus­sions instead of drills and rote learn­ing. But Wilson’s best friend, Henry Bur­chard Fine, hap­pened to be a math­e­mati­cian. When Wil­son set about hir­ing lit­er­a­ture and his­tory schol­ars as pre­cep­tors, Fine asked him, “Why not a few sci­en­tists?” As a ges­ture of friend­ship more than any­thing else, Wil­son said yes.

… Most peo­ple think that America’s rise to sci­en­tific promi­nance was a by-product of World War II. But in fact the for­tunes accu­mu­lated between the gilded eight­ies and the roar­ing twen­ties paved the way.

It was not just one thing, but chain of events, but the deci­sive move was made because of friend­ship. Noth­ing as dra­matic as rise of sci­en­tists in US, but I can tell a few sto­ries about how great work results came about from friend­ship and good­will just going with the flow of events that unrolled.

 

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