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Beyond Genius
Beyond Genius: A Journey Through the Characteristics and Legacies of Transformative Minds | Bulent Atalay
2 posts | 1 read
An in-depth and unified exploration of genius in the arts and sciences through the life and works of five seminal intellectual and cultural figures: Leonardo da Vinci, William Shakespeare, Isaac Newton, Ludwig von Beethoven, and Albert Einstein. Who among us hasn't read Hamlet, listened to the Fifth Symphony, gazed at the Mona Lisa, or marveled at the three laws of physics and the Theory of Relativity and been struck with the same simple question: how on Earth did they do it? Where did these masters draw inspiration to produce some of the most stunning achievements in human history? Were their brains wired differently than ours? Did they have special traits or unique experiences that set them on the path to greatness? Genius is a broad and elusive concept, one that is divisive and hard to defineand gravely misunderstood. There are ordinary geniuses who achieve remarkable feats of brilliance, as well as magicians (a term James Gleick invoked to describe Richard Feynman) who make an outsize impact on their given field. But highest among them are transformative geniuses, those rare individuals who redefine their fields or open up new universes of thought altogether. These are the masters whose genius Bulent Atalay decodes in his engrossing, enlightening, and revelatory book. No, Atalay doesnt have a road map for how we might become the next Einstein or Leonardo, but his revolutionary study of genius gives us a stunning new lens through which to view humanitys most prolific thinkers and creators and perhaps pick up some inspiration along the way. At first, it seems that transformative geniuses dont follow any sort of topography. Their prodigious output looks effortless, they leap from summit to summit, and they probably couldnt explain exactly how they went about solving their problems. They might not even recognize themselves in the ways we talk about them today. Atalay argues that these heroes fit more of a mold than we might think. As evidence, he rigorously dissects the lives, traits, habits, and thought patterns of five exemplarsLeonardo, Shakespeare, Newton, Beethoven, and Einstein to map the path of the transformative genius. How did Beethoven, who could not perform basic multiplication, innately encode the Fibonacci Sequence in his symphonies? Is it possible that we understate Shakespeares poetic influence? How did Leonardo become equally prolific in both the arts and the sciences? How did Newton formulate the universal laws of physics, the basis of so many other sciences? And what prompted TIME Magazine to declare Einstein, a man whose very name is synonymous with genius, the Individual of the 20th Century? With great clarity and attention to detail, Atalay expertly traces how these five exemplars ascended to immortality and what their lives and legacies reveal about how transformative geniuses are made
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Taylor
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Longer than I expected, and dry for many pages, but overall I‘m incredibly glad I read it, grateful really.

This book is enlightening, and I came to certain revelations that have me charged up.

My only quibble is it‘s overly science focused, I suspect because the author is a physicist, so he loves it. There‘s really just a chapter on Shakespeare and then some talk about him at the end.

quote
Taylor

We have learned to understand the universe through science and not through art, or religion. In the case of science and religion, the late Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould summarized the nonoverlapping magisteria of the two cultures: “Science gets the age of rocks, religion gets the rock of ages … Science explains how the heavens go, religion tells you how to get to heaven.”