Hello, I'm the original creator 👋hehehe It's so nice to see I've sparked more interest in this topic and seeing other creators' perspectives. I've watched the video and here are my thoughts: - Taking this on from an economist's perspective is really interesting. Trying to make sense of human emotions in their scale of work in economics is an abstract that I really hope we can build upon. - You've clarified OBT which I've covered in my video in a more concise manner with the 80/20 rule 👍 - You've made great examples of generalists with writers & artists, something that I may have missed out on my video 👏 - The sense of accomplishment and purpose as an incentive for people to work so that they can enjoy what they're doing, instead of working because they only want the outcome (i.e. monetary value, prestige, etc). Very good. Overall a breath of fresh air in perspective. Really solid video, 10/10.
@jaystrickland41512 ай бұрын
This is against the rules. You two made a video on the same topic. You need to argue like elementary school children in 2 hour long video essays. Fulfill your youtube terms and start the war.
@MikAlexanderАй бұрын
In medieval era Catholic Church had a Holiday every 3rd day and that day was off, plus Sundays where always off, plus Eastern and Christmas.
@WardofSquidАй бұрын
I LOVE seeing small creators working off each other mutually🎉 🤜🤛
@througtonsheirs_doctorwhol5914Ай бұрын
if i had been RPG specialist, i would neverhave got a 100% completion on The Messenger, or Super Blood Hockey, but i am a retro-ghamer generalist, with specilized passions for styles. Likewise,having got my 1st degree as an analyst programmer, then one in litterature, and learning music all my life on the side, drawing all my life, i amassed the skills to build a small indie game for a personal project. I'll be working on this this year
@starc.Ай бұрын
the first 7 minutes about specialisation absolute snore didnt need to be in there
@RowboatFleet112 ай бұрын
Don’t be a generalist or a specialist. Be terrible at everything and rely on everyone else to do work for you.
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
Stop giving away Billionaire secrets.
@NaisanSama2 ай бұрын
Lazy smartasses basically
@rainx70782 ай бұрын
Wahhh😮 a politician... Though, you are slightly wrong. They are master bullshitters!
@JuanIgnacioNoguéRodriguez2 ай бұрын
real
@nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti53752 ай бұрын
You don't need to learn anything, just to manipulate people to do things for you lol
@Sappysappster2 ай бұрын
Instructions unclear: I am now good at conjuration and manipulation
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
Shit, not another one.
@dementia44522 ай бұрын
WITCH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@JustCJson2 ай бұрын
were learning nen with this one 🗣🔥
@minimino98782 ай бұрын
gotta take advantage of this
@theyoungknight.31192 ай бұрын
Funnily enough that would make your category specialist.
@forevern2dust2 ай бұрын
Specialize in learning, generalize in subject selection.
@nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti53752 ай бұрын
Great advice! Learn efficiently is the best skill in modern era.
@niggacockball79952 ай бұрын
This. One of the greatest advantages i had against my peers in any situation was my ability to adapt and learn quicker than them.
@tikimillie2 ай бұрын
Adapt or die, learn or die
@Anomalocringe2 ай бұрын
what if you end up knowing a lot but not being able to do jackshit
@nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti53752 ай бұрын
@@Anomalocringe You can still be a teacher, consultant or coach.
@agentqshmickelfritz87142 ай бұрын
"No one is a true specialist." Counter argument: No one is a true generalist.
@abstract27562 ай бұрын
True. What I understand is that a specialist would be hyper-skilled in 1 task and completely unskilled in others as if he'd never done them or trained on them. A generalist would be equally good at every single task he's ever come across. We don't give all our time to the same task, nor do we give all our tasks the same time. Over the course of life, we happen to lean into 1 task more than others due to having to choose at least SOMETHING, since "life is short", but we also don't only choose that 1 thing because "life is too long" (or rather the perception of time gets too long due to mundanity). One could say that the realistic definition of a Specialist is one who efficienty utilises all sub-experiences for enhancing his Primary experience/task, which is what the video also describes when mentioning "the best professionals". Sort of just thinking out loud lol.
@ultimaxkom8728Ай бұрын
*Flip the table:* using the extreme end of a word is unproductive. *Meta:* You can't be a generalist because you'll specialize in being a generalist."
@LyudmilaÖdiАй бұрын
This is the only truth I believe in. People like to believe their lives are monotonous and classified. I Master in some aspects, but I also know other aspects that I'm bad or average, that's no JOAT
@theformidablefrog1967Ай бұрын
We can’t help but to be generalists bc that’s the only way we master tasks, and things.
@nemesissombriaАй бұрын
Yes, it is a scale. You can't either specialise in absolutely one thing or be okay at everything, but you can be somewhere closer to one or another
@Gleavess2 ай бұрын
People usually forget the last part of the saying. It's "A jack of all trades is a master of none, but oftentimes better than a master of one" and the last part is often so damn true
@LoydeReedАй бұрын
As it was put to me by my foreman: "How often do we need a master? How often do we need a floater?"
@ecogreen123Ай бұрын
indeed
@deathgobbler4774Ай бұрын
almost as if people know sth they can do it
@trolorgamesАй бұрын
"Jack of all trades master of none, still better then a fool who only knows one" Was the version I had heard
@ecogreen123Ай бұрын
@@trolorgames best version of the quote i have heard.
@inteo_2 ай бұрын
I find the idea of “generalist KZbinrs” very interesting. I would say a good example of this would be vsauce. He covers a wide range of interesting topics about science, math, psychology, and basically anything. He’s been on KZbin for many years and he’ll never run out of ideas because of the broad area of topics he covers in his channel.
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
Yeah Vsauce is pretty much a 'did you know' or 'learning' type of channel.
@unknowngojira7422 ай бұрын
Vsauce is awesome
@pravesharya1073Ай бұрын
a Legend !!!
@coltonmaccuneАй бұрын
Austin McConnell is another great example too.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
That's how I aspire to be but I don't want to create videos. Blogposts maybe, but I don't know how many people are reading blogs these days. About macroeconomics, the stock market, psychology, philosophy, tech etc.
@nayvinyamiАй бұрын
“A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.” ― Robert A. Heinlein
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Yes yes. That was beautiful!
@CunnyVirus19 күн бұрын
that last part is what makes this makes sense
@logical-fuzz18 күн бұрын
One of my favorite quotes! Thank you for this!
@BlackReshiram2 ай бұрын
i think creative people have a lot of trouble being "specialists" anyway. inevitably, my mind will drift off to all the other things i could or wanna do.
@ArantyrDarkhand2 ай бұрын
Well im a veterinarian i work with small animals (dogs and cats) ive 2 specializations anesthesia and image (Ultrassound, radiology, endoscospy etc), yet im a generalist, i know and have experience in every aspect. Clinic, surgery, intensivism, management and administration, wild animals and soo on. My job now its kinda teach ppl how to work haha, and be paid to close the diagnostic.
@Not_DebАй бұрын
FR
@BlackReshiram17 күн бұрын
@@ArantyrDarkhand mad respect but i was talking abt more creative fields haha, sorry for not being more clear about it
@RunaCluster2 ай бұрын
As a jack of all trades, I never burn out... nor sleep💀 But boy is it worth it...cuz I'm a student who can't hire/ commission other people.💀
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
You should at least sleep.
@RunaCluster2 ай бұрын
@@ScritRighter Oh, I was just joking but thanks, stay healthy.👍
@Lighitup62 ай бұрын
@@RunaCluster you’re a 14 year old that thinks this is funny. You should have the same thing happen to you but I don’t want you to blow ur noodles out
@PennyEvolus2 ай бұрын
@@ScritRighterNEVER SLEEP IS FOR THE WEAK
@X-Otic-s2 ай бұрын
@@PennyEvolus Nah, I'd sleep
@nullpoint3346Ай бұрын
On an individual basis, it is better to be a generalist. On a societal basis, you want to have specialists.
@hoi-polloi1863Ай бұрын
I like where you're going here. After all, one of the big deals about the agricultural revolution (back in the Stone Age) was that food surpluses gave people the opportunity to develop specialists. This trend is still going strong.
@nullpoint3346Ай бұрын
@@hoi-polloi1863 Ants are fascinating colony organisms with morphological specialization, and humans have behaviour specialization.
@ambrosiogiovanni6952Ай бұрын
Unless you're in a leadership position. If you're good at leading, you don't need to know everything, just enough to understand the feedback and issues your specialized team is facing, since most of the time you're dealing with people with different specializations .
@nullpoint33464 күн бұрын
@@ambrosiogiovanni6952 A leader is of no use without followers.
@hylian_likely2 ай бұрын
“The Jack of all trades is master of none, but oftentimes better than the master of one” The original saying actually understood this concept but we just decided to chop off the last half
@TheUmbraSolАй бұрын
We do that with a lot of idioms "Curiosity killed the cat- -but satisfaction brought it back" "Blood-" of the covenant "-is thicker than water "of the womb" And it's strange that these chopping of idioms creates the exact opposite of their intended meaning.
@thebaconwizard6862Ай бұрын
This guy is so wrong about, at least, half of the nonsense he's spewing
@klimmesil958524 күн бұрын
It's not the original saying. This is Shakespeare's twist on the original saying
@thebreadbringer21 күн бұрын
Same as "The customer is always right in matters of taste."
@DouglasHuyck10 күн бұрын
Inconveniently intelligent.
@totoc1122Ай бұрын
"We will never find one singular thing that we will enjoy day in and day out" - Hold my autism
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Autism helps with focus? 😮
@aiacfrosti177224 күн бұрын
@@danlightened Well, yes. But you aren't the one in charge. The thing that you hyperfixate on is chosen for you. You will not look away. It's 3 am. Nothing else matters.
@CunnyVirus19 күн бұрын
wait that's autism? maybe I am. I need to check
@danlightened7 күн бұрын
@@aiacfrosti1772 Isn't that like ADHD? I have ADHD and I totally hyper fixate on random stuff, even though my life maybe dumpser fire. Maybe I have AuDHD.
@mansonfd78352 ай бұрын
Jack of all trades main weakness is multitasking. Kinda like in video games logic where jack of all trades' power scale were pretty much half-assed than the specialists. Example: A. Jack of all trades: Attack: 50 Strength: 50 Intelligence: 50 B. Specialist: Attack: Either 100/anything Strength: Either 100/anything Intelligence: Either 100/anything
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
Me dealing more damage because of soft caps at level 50 and my weapon scaling with Strength and Intelligence.
@nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti53752 ай бұрын
I think the generalist is the guy that will surpass the XP limit and be 100/100 on every stat. The develop of the character will be slower, but the result will be much stronger.
@justanub46972 ай бұрын
@@nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti5375Well most generalists in real life don't even hit the level cap.
@damasake2 ай бұрын
@@justanub4697 Some generalists that hit the level cap, somehow: Attack: 90 Strength: 90 Intelligence: 90
@sztypettto2 ай бұрын
If we were to translate this analogy into a MOBA or Party RPG, the Jack of all Trades would be the Support/Roamer role or the Warlock class from DnD/WoW games. Jack of all trades have the unique ability to explore, experiment, and pioneer to make better versions of themselves aka 'specialists'. Generalists are supposed to lead, manage, control specialists. 1v1 a specialist can beat a generalist any day. But a Generalist beats all specialists on a strategic level in the long run. Problem is that the global order incentivises specialists obviously because of the meta, specialists suck as leaders.
@harvesterofsubs55612 ай бұрын
This just makes me reflect: I’m on my first job rn, KFC cook, and these lazy-ass people on customer service do nothing. They don’t clean dishes, they don’t change bins and they don’t do maintenance despite having ample free time (between serving customers). And then you have me, who is constantly cooking chicken then rotating it and cleaning the kitchen: “Hey, manager, I finished all my jobs.” The manager: “Ok, cool. Clean the dishes, change the bins, do maintenance.” That’s why I don’t tell the managers I finished my jobs anymore. 😅
@Deleted-User125352 ай бұрын
Oh damn, have you considered switching jobs , or this is just a part time unsure because you said its your first job but idk how long you worked
@harvesterofsubs55612 ай бұрын
@@Deleted-User12535 It’s a casual-job and, yeah, my very first. I’d actually consider it a good first job because it’s made me much more resilient and patient, plus I’ve learnt how to socialise better (there are lots of people I like there, despite how angry my comment is). I’ll be finding a new job soon though, for sure.
@damianzieba51332 ай бұрын
It's great how menager wanting to make work more effective (by giving extra tasks for the same salary) is making it less effective because no one ever wants to finish anything before the day is over
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
Yeah, most jobs are like this. Unless it's physical labor, there's a lot of periods of downtime where you basically do nothing. Office work is extremely easy and there's almost never enough of it to keep you busy the full day. The only people who are busy are the managers and that one guy who knows a little about everyone's job and gets pulled for help (or just to do the job for them) all hours of the day.
@agodelianshock94222 ай бұрын
The key is looking busy at all times and stretching out your tasks to fill the time you've been given. Only go above and beyond when its going to make your own life easier or you are directly asked to do so. Especially in minimum wage jobs. Otherwise you'll get saddled with busy work and your coworkers who aren't working hard may resent you for showing them up.
@RosmarinusCruz2 ай бұрын
I've always loved learning and trying new things back then and even now. But now that I'm an adult suddenly i felt inadequate that i never got any remarkable results from the things I've done over the years. Played alot of video games but never got really good at any of them, learned how to play instruments but only ever learned to play a few songs, learned how to draw but felt like I've already hit the wall of how good I'll ever get. But this video reminded me of why I do these things, I do them because they're fun. Creating, learning, and experimenting are the stuffs i live for. It reminds me that there is so much to do in life, so many things you could experience and discover for yourself in a single lifetime. It doesn't matter how inadequate my results are compared to others or what is expected of me, what matters is that I've learned something new, and it's this feeling that I accomplished something important for myself that no one can take away from me.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
The experience and knowledge of certain things however random can come to be of use in the most farther fields from it. It's hard to know when, but it does. And even if it doesn't, to be human and alive, is to experience life. So, it's okay to keep experiencing.
@GarlicSodaАй бұрын
Attempting to specialize in something you enjoy can suck the fun out of it. I've heard to never make your hobby into your career because a painters walls always need painted but he's just got home from painting all day, the last thing he wants to do is paint his own house.
@gneissguy65442 ай бұрын
Generalisation is good but too broad a spectrum is bad. Too much choice will kill action especially for overthinkers like myself. I guess like in everything in life you need a good mixture of components.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Yeah, I mean one mostly doesn't need to know a whole lot of random facts as mentioned in Random facts #637 etc. Or did you know. Like such and such planet has alcohol in it and such and such fish has this kinda exoskeleton and so on. Unless you're in a related field. I personally love the bigger picture, that's why I keep reading up on philosophy, psychology, sociology, macroeconomics etc. or watching videos about them on KZbin.
@Ghee_Buttersnaps2 ай бұрын
17:39 I can't tell how much I needed to hear this back in high school man: I would practice playing cello EVERY DAY for at least an hour and I would feel like I wasn't improving and i was just miserable watching my peers surpass me... It literally made me a worse person for that time in my life
@thelordz332 ай бұрын
The irony with Pirate Software is that often times the fact that he is making a game is secondary to his personality and how he engages with his audience. There is almost no actual hype for HeartBound itself, only for Thor and PirateSoftware.
@herrpezАй бұрын
Calling him a game dev is... generous. Not entirely inaccurate, true. But Thor is to game devs, what Pluto is to planets. 😉 Doesn't quite meet a reasonable standard, but certainly plays in the same sandbox.
@zeez7777Ай бұрын
Im very confused about PirateSoftware, his advice seems very valuable on a myriad of topics but whenever i see anything technical related to HeartBound it makes me question if he's a fraud, no offense to him.
@DreamyAileenАй бұрын
@@zeez7777 Also his attitude towards Stop Killing Games is, to be blunt, utterly moronic.
@digitalcthulhu143Ай бұрын
Yeah his take was straight up bad lmao @DreamyAileen
@adarshpathak521922 күн бұрын
@@zeez7777 I follow the "take what's useful and leave the rest" type approach, so it doesn't matter if heartbound is good or not
@fang4853Ай бұрын
I had specialist come in and said our modifications on the machine made it “unsafe” so he brought it back to stock and the modified part that was reverted back nearly caused our operator hands getting crushed by the 400 pound guard. So we removed his dumb check valve and the guard does not drop at all while setting up machine. Just having the “specialist” does not make you better than the generalist. I can machine parts weld rebuild/repair machines, and do a bit of engineering. Generalists don’t get the credit they deserve. Its not hard working on one machine everyday and understanding how it works in every action. Its harder to do that on every machine in the plant
@ScritRighterАй бұрын
Specialists will often format things so that it works for their purposes and their knowledge. Generalists will format things so that it works for everyone.
@darkhanvasilev708026 күн бұрын
Isn't he generalist in this case? He used general knowledge on how things should work, while you used your very specific knowledge from the experience working with the machine to modify it
@samdurfee6093Ай бұрын
So I clicked on this video thinking it was about Specialization vs Generalist in TTRPG given the thumbnail. Instead I’m watching a video that seems to be about the Human condition in regards to work vs fulfillment.
@madness_bomb96012 ай бұрын
i also realised 2 days ago i think that i'd much rather be a generalist. one of my problems was literally: "oh i don't want to be labeled as this, but i also don't want to be labeled as this" and this solves that problem perfectly by just being both so you're not particularly either one also, i realised that probably a bunch of interesting but seemingly difficult skillsets you can just acquire by using cheap and sometimes even free resources like the internet and your local library. And the funny thing is, when you do it right you're way more engaged with the work that you're doing because u don't have "ugh i wanna go home" in the back of your mind and because you actively choose to practice or to do the skill, it means you're more motivated to do it because it's what you chose instead of someone else telling you that you need to do it, it also makes it more rewarding because you set out do learn something and you did it which builds confidence self studying also avoids bad things like unnecessary/outdated things to learn, and comparing yourself to other students/colleagues's skill level also imagine 2 people person person A (specialist) does programming and person B (generalist) does programming and art. A thinks of themself as a hard-working person B thinks of themself as a lazy person so A gets burnt out after intensely working 2 hours straight and takes a 20 minute break only to think to themselves in that break "i don't want to do it again today, it's too much" and then proceed to throw away their "productive" day that they had planned because B is a lazy person he decides to just do 1 hour of programming and after that he decides to draw for 2 hours because it was so enjoyable he lost track of time, he continues to do some programming of 1 hour after browsing the internet for a bit and decides to make himself a fancy lunch because starting today he's gonna use the cooking techniques and knowledge mentioned in a few of the videos he watched while browsing the internet. person A makes 2 hours worth of progress and goes to bed with a bitter aftertaste which might make him forget it more easily. person B makes 2 hours worth of progress on programming, 2 hours worth of progress making art and is practicing his cooking skills for fun, and he has the rest of the day to do whatever he feels like. now you might say: "huh? you're telling me person A is the hard-working one and B is the lazy one?" my answer remains yes person A views it as work and tries to force his mind to learn stuff while dreading it person B views it as hobbies which are fun, interesting and useful and thinks to himself right after he wakes up "oh boy i wonder what i should do first :D"
@ferlitten2 ай бұрын
Super relatable! Whenever I do something to be "productive" and not because I want to do it, that ironically makes me less productive and wanting to quit doing it because I can't bear it anymore. And that leaves me feeling useless, unproductive and such, because of the mentality that I need to be "productive", "eficient" and those kind of captalist mindset. Now, whenever I do something I want, I find myself spending hours nonstop on something (or multiple things) and, without noticing, made one 200+ page long RPG System, and is in the middle of rewriting it from scratch (now sitting at 100+ pages), while enjoying writing every word of it. For some, that would be a chore, but because I enjoy it and is something I want to do, I do it for hours without noticing.
@madness_bomb96012 ай бұрын
@@ferlitten yeah good to hear :D
@abstract27562 ай бұрын
@@ferlittenI found a 1980's film themed advertisement video recently that portrayed a VR gaming addicted dissatisfied man, envying his neighbor who's productive and very multi-faceted in life. The narrator of the video explains how much people hate when someone tells them what they should do, therefore it's the last thing you'd wanna do to yourself. What you should do instead is conceptualize what you REALLY want to do, TRULY, for the ideal and frankly attractive future of your life. And that's it. You just need that CLARITY. Your body and mind will do the rest. Also to reply to madness_bomb, I also hate it when I get called an "editor" or even "he does editing" lol
@doctafisticuffs3286Ай бұрын
My advice would be to skip labels entirely and strive for being skilled at learning and observing specualized things. Mastering learning masters everything that comes to you
@danlightenedАй бұрын
@@ferlittenTrue true. You're in that flow state.
@Archieball-d8uАй бұрын
I appreciate this video, very motivational, made me consider only occasionally playing video games and only occasionally not showering.
@SyihanMohdАй бұрын
We like to be generalist, however whenever we have cancer we tend to find specialist rather then general doctors
@patiakrelesАй бұрын
In my experience, many specialists don't know shit of what they are doing, because they don't see how their work impacts other aspects. It is true for doctora that specialize too much and then never study again. I can't wait until AI assisted medicine helps them with their current knowledge. Study for specialization=/= knowing how things work. For example, many economists don't know shit about how economy actually works, they have never had a successful company and just repeat ideologies that have 0 evidence...
@Kargbo-Reffell_MusicАй бұрын
Patients tend to be refered to a specialist oncolologist by a generalist general practitioner (gp).
@kenzou776Ай бұрын
@@Kargbo-Reffell_Music Exactly. Both are vital
@kronos5437Ай бұрын
Specialists in the medical field are just further trained and educated GPs
@Kargbo-Reffell_Music29 күн бұрын
@@kronos5437 That is incorrect. It takes years post med school to become a GP.
@Krikitey2 ай бұрын
You're changing my whole perspective on making youtube video's. I want to make a career out of you tube, but honestly I'm starting to think my purpose isn't to solely create content on an internet platform. I want to start seeing youtube as a hobby again rather than a job, because that is when it was actually fun.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Most good KZbinrs are highly knowledgeable in a couple in couple of fields. But also generalists. It helps them get the point across by using analogies rooted in other fields, so that the common man can understand it too.
@mrstorch506818 күн бұрын
First time seeing you, and now I have subscribed. I like your stuff. Will see more.
@mr.blueguy76482 ай бұрын
This is rather eye opening... i didn't pay it much mind before but yeah most of the youtubers i like bring experiences from other parts of their lives to make a video about.
@superradmakerАй бұрын
This was great! As someone who has a ton of hobbies this made me feel justified. Not that I needed it to keep having fun but it felt good. I hope more people get inspired to start enjoying life actively as opposed to passively.
@RazarOmni2 ай бұрын
great video and very well doe how you describe the circumstances of both sides. I agree with you on your words, believing too to do things because you see fun and joy in them. I read, I draw, I make videos, I play games - All that when I know, it helps to change the mundane day of my life to a more focused calm.
@GooseEnjoyerАй бұрын
All myife I've always been told that i need to specialise in something, but I've always felt like that wasn't for me. This video was very helpful to me, it gave me a new perspective, you could say.
@kingoreo70502 ай бұрын
While its true being a generalist is generally good, the idea of limiting scope to one a few things at any guven time is still valid. Getting very good at one thing like the fantasy writers with history then opened up doors for them that likely wouldnt be available had they spread their focus between many different skills at once. You become a good generalist by being a specialist in a few things over a long time, and specialisation allows that to happen.
@ultimaxkom8728Ай бұрын
Contrived premise; specialist are not who _"focus their whole life on drawing, and nothing else."_ It's silly. Specialist is not a dichotomy. Not a binary.
@CFlandreАй бұрын
@@ultimaxkom8728That's exactly what a specialist is: one who focuses on perfecting a single skill or "genre" of skills, over another.
@alexicon2006Ай бұрын
@@CFlandreDawg thats the most nuanceless perspective Ive ever seen or heard holy
@CFlandreАй бұрын
@@alexicon2006 But am I wrong?
@alexicon2006Ай бұрын
@@CFlandre If we talking realistically then yes. If we're talking about situations stripped of context nuance and details to the state at which they cater to your points then sure pop off my g.
@TheRoyalSkiesАй бұрын
So, I do agree with you to an extent, most people will naturally drift to the "generalist" direction because in general a lot of people get bored very easily doing the same thing over and over. I will say though, that many artists fall into the opposite category though. I know writers who would could write all day every day, I know musicians who could practice and play music all day everyday, or painters who if given the chance would happily just spend all day painting. The people who made Samurai swords honed that craft their entire lives, and were often very fulfilled in doing so. If you are one of these people, then trying to take the generalist path will often prevent you from ever realizing your true potential in that art. And, the caveat to that is when it comes to getting hired, people don't want to hire someone who is generally good at most things. If I'm working on a game and I need an animator for a project. I'm it makes no sense to hire someone who "can" animate over someone who "only" animates. The master animator will also deliver better results faster most of the time, while also doing something they find fulfilling. I think being a generalist is fine if you want to make casual content at your own leisure at your own comfort. However when it comes to solving anything serious, that's when the specialist becomes invaluable every-time. If your car breaks down, or your online multiplayer servers go down, or the plumbing fails. You want the specialist mechanic, or Server Maintenance guy, or Plumber guy for these things, and that has nothing to do with economics or human behavior, simply a matter of wanting the best person for the job when it matters most - But, again, I like the points you make, and I think you have many good ones, keep it up bro -
@alexicon2006Ай бұрын
I fully agree! THIS is the most balanced and accurate perspective one can have imo. I am trying to get in a purely mathematics and statistics based university next year. I am planning on becoming a mathematician so I guess I'll be a specialist. But here's the kicker tho. Im VERY good at LEARNING physics. Im very good at LEARNING computer science. Same for art, instruments, and for public speaking and general knowledge Im already fairly confident in those. I am a total beginner in programming languages. But if Id wanted to Id have made my career in that instead because, well, I couldve. All my teachers throughout High school recommended me different paths, from chemistry teacher suggesting chem engineering to physics teacher recommending astrophysics to english teacher recommending I start writing youtubing public speaking anything. So am I REALLY a specialist if the learning curve for any skill is never too steep for me? I'd guess not. But my core love is and always will be mathematics. I will always be a specialist in maths no matter what. But in case I need another side hustle, I know I'll be able to learn a few programming languages in a few months each and find a small placement. Stuff like that. I think Im a learning specialist. Because mind you. My coding rn is DOGWATER. Same with my economics, psychology is decent, but physics and astronomy and all are really weak. Thats where I fail as a generalist. But if I'd ever need to know those fields, I will. And thats all I need realistically speaking. So yeah I take pride in being a proud specialist!!! I'll end my yap session here. I tried my absolute best to be as boastful and pretentious as possible I hope I did well in that department.
@lukeskywalkerthe2nd773Ай бұрын
@TheRoyalSkies I can definitely understand some of your points. There are indeed artists who are comfortable with just the one medium they specialized in and would do just that all day if they could. And when the chips are down when it does come to something serious to things like you said it would probably be better to bring in the certified, experienced specialist than not. However I would disagree, when it comes to art at least, that choosing the generalist path would prevent you from realizing your potential in a specific art. For all the artists that love to do just their one chosen art and do great at just that, there has been plenty throughout history that have excelled in multiple arts. There have been novelists who were not only great at novels but also paintings, and painters who were not only great at painting but also poetry, and poets who were also really good at music (i.e. Rabinadrath Tagore, Goethe, Michaelangelo, etc). So with the arts anyway, you can seriously master more than one.
@OrnatelunaАй бұрын
Being good at something doesn't mean you are a specialist. This is probably mostly bc of the examples used but if my car breaks down I would just need someone who knows how to fix it (plus most problems do not require very specialized people to solve) same stuff for the other examples and that's really usually the case, doubt many people with phd's work at a car shop or maintain game servers. With your point about hiring an animator Simone Giertz had a good quote in this vain "It's a lot better to hire smart people to learn than to hire stupid people to do something they already know how to do" plus you are kinda under the assumption that one, that person does find it fulfilling which they might not and second that they are a specialist. I highly doubt you need actual specialists unless you are planning on making the next biggest particle accelarator or something in those lines. I am not good at writing and I imagine I was just arguing semantics so apologies for that.
@KhotetsuАй бұрын
"Generalist" doesn't mean "every task in the world". A specialist is still a generalist in adjacent fields. You need a good foundation in order to become good at a specific thing. The illustrator who works on creating medical textbooks needs to have a similar competency in anatomy as a generalized doctor. The painter painting landscapes needs to know perspective and lighting just as well as the 3d modeler doing renders for a movie studio. The musician knows how to play on more instruments than just a 1987 Stratocaster. Tolkien wrote the Lord of the Rings (and the Silmarillion) as an excuse to make up fantasy languages because his obsession was the history of languages and how they develop. In order to realistically animate a car, you need a general knowledge of how a car works. An animator who only knows how to animate but doesn't understand how a car works likely won't give you good results compared to the one who also works on their own car - even if they aren't as good an animator. I have a saying that I've developed over the years: "Scratch an artist and you'll find a student of many subjects." Many (most) artists would absolutely spend every day doing their chosen field, but I bet they enjoy working on a variety of subject matters in their art rather than, say, drawing daisies for 10 years straight. And that's what they really mean by "generalist" - a person who has interests in different subjects and has combined those experiences to result in something else. The painter who likes to travel, the musician who plays a 250 year-old pipe organ just as well as a synthesizer, the former game dev who makes V-Tuber rigs. All masters in their own specific niche, but whose lives are richer from the breadth of their experiences.
@TheMenaceSauce2 ай бұрын
This video rocks. I am a huge generalist, and I am working very hard on all my different crafts right now. Learning about writing and philosophy definitely put me on this path, hope to release tons of things in all mediums some day and change the world. Godspeed generalists!
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Big generalist here too and proponent of it. Philosophy is becoming my favourite subject now. You can check my playlist titled Philosophy. It has over 120 videos by amazing creators here on KZbin. I am not a great writer but I hope to create some blog talking and mentioning resources (such as these videos) on economics, philosophy, psychology, sociology etc. and their interconnectedness. Godspeed brother. I hope to see your works someday.
@jakubwujczyk4836Ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. I really needed someone to remind me of the conclusions, you also reached. It seems that as people, we tend to forget our old life lessons due to the constant need for change and 'optimization.' This, at least for me, often leads to a point where I end up making the same mistakes for which I had already found solutions. Thank you once again. EDIT: Remainded and clarify. A lot of new for me, great points.
@LucRio448Ай бұрын
God, there are SO many issues of the whole idea of specialists being the best for ANY job really. I mean let's assume for fun, there was an actual specialist tennis players, who specialises in serving. Now have him play a match against Rafael Nadal, just for fun. Maybe Specials serves are so good, Nadal only manages to receive 10% of them, cool. But if Special really is a true specialist, he's pretty bad at any other part of the game. Meaning every serve he makes that Nadal receives properly is automatically a point for Nadal. Every serve Nadal does also is automatically a point for Nadal. Does anyone really believe, there is any chance Special is EVER gonna be higher ranked as a player than Nadal at all, assuming Nadal was still actively playing? The reason why companies want specialists is pretty simple. Well, actually it's two-fold. First of all, they don't, they want what in German is called "Eierlegende Wollmilchsau" - they want a generelist who is also a specialist in EVERYTHING at the same time, preferably for free. Second, a specialist is way easier to control than a generalist. A specialist might come up with an idea that branches out of his area of super-expertise, you tell him that part out of his super-expertise wouldn't work, and that's that - and companies love to pull the "but we've always done it that way"-card. Try doing that with a generalist, that's even the START of that conversation. You better be prepared to actually EXPLAIN with actual ARGUMENTS/PROOF why that wouldn't work, because the generalist knows enough about that other thing to doubt that claim until you provide arguments why that would be. And even if you manage to do that, he may already have a plan B or C in mind, or come up with a solution on the fly to your pointed out flaw in his idea. And let's be honest, at a certain level, management is full of people who "specialise" in corporate bullshit bingo speedrunning and quoting their business-whatever-professor while believing they actually know jack about anythign that happens below management level - when actually every 2 month intern knows more about 90% of the process than the management level combined. So people who actually KNOW they are talking crap are pretty uncomfortable for them, obviously.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Haha, this is exactly what was happening at the construction company I was working at. As a generalists and disruptor, I questioned all their methods and told them I have a better and more efficient way. And I, a near fresher was telling this to all HODs. Many were quite sceptical and reluctant. But they saw the results and from then on, I was only working with the HODs. And they were coming with their problems to me. I created a few systems on Excel and some combinations and they were still in use long after I left.
@MirdjanHyle2 ай бұрын
Specialists don't exist. Generalists also don't exist. We are all T-shaped people, and the debate sparks entirely from Résumé culture. Also every role in every profession that requires a team (which is all of them) can be boiled down into Tankers, Healers and DPS.
@themarlboromandalorianАй бұрын
It goes in the square hole.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
There are people who prefer being generalists and others specialist. But yeah, understanding the T shape of skills and knowledge acquisition is important. And it's a continuous process of improving your main skills and then others or the other way around, depending on how people prefer gain their knowledge.
@dudeistpreist5721Ай бұрын
Endurance, utility,and high efficiency/productivity workers.
@NukeCloudstalker27 күн бұрын
Specialists tend to be people that learned one thing, then stopped. Making "generalists" superior, simply for the fact that they are more skilled at more things. All in all the terms don't really carry much meaning in themselves. But "specialist" and "expert" tend to describe amateurs and overhyped mediocre people.
@Oi-mj6dv10 күн бұрын
@@NukeCloudstalker Not really true. If you truly go balls deep you cant really finish learning a topic. It would be insane level of hubris to think otherwise. Tell me, when exactly have you "finished" music. For instance. Is it when you are a konnakol master? When you surpass Charlie parker improvisation wise? Or when your fugues are at bach level? Or when your songs have the impact bob Dylan had in his generation? Now expand that to all the possible topics. No generalists have their own benefits attached to their inclinations but unless the specialist is truly a lazy fuck or the generalist is some god emperor of man kind level of genius, by necessity the generalist knowledge is always more than a few levels shallower.
@leonardodelgado75732 ай бұрын
I agree with most of what you said and this video is absolutly brilliant. But let me add something: A specialization can be a good thing as it may serve as something to return to something to focus yourself on when you want, a way to give some what of purpose to your life something to be proud of. But as you said it can't be the only thing in your life.
@waterinferno20712 ай бұрын
Learning new things just satisfies me how nothing else can, but I also picked a few things to stick with forever and constantly improve on
@themarlboromandalorianАй бұрын
A wizard. Wizards are scholars of systems of power. Could be chemistry. Could be martial combat. Could be botany. Could be sociopolitics/social engineering. And is often as many as the wizard can assimilate. Are you a wizard, Harry? Learn some systems of power. Be a wizard.
@unprankable666Ай бұрын
I love to learn new things. I always have. So I've filled my brain with so much knowledge on all these subjects I'll never use, and not nearly enough to actually apply that knowledge in the specific field. I've been trying to reel this in, and focus it more onto things I need, but I don't stop learning other things just because I won't use them. They're still fun and interesting things, and the process of researching something to find out what's true is honestly really fun to me. This video is incredible, and I'm always glad to find someone who sees things in either the same way or a better way than I do.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
It's both a bane and boon. I feel your enthusiasm. Learning/trying new things is incredibly fun and satisfies some primal need within me. I live for it. Issue is, most of us might know more than the average person but not so much to get a job. In fact, we might not even want a job in many of those fields. Like, I'm good with tech and computers. Do a lot of troubleshooting and you know, downloading pirated stuff back in the days. Cracking etc. But I've always thought that it was a means to an end; the end being able to play a game or use a software. But when I was offered an IT admin job, I didn't want to do that full time. Stuff like installing softwares etc on hundred laptops. I don't care for that.
@OrnatelunaАй бұрын
I am in a similar boat but there have been quite a few times these random bits of information have found proper use, perhaps just trying to be in more environments where there isn't an already established person to do a specific task could make your general knowledge shine.
@YUKANO_Dreams2 ай бұрын
Hello, Scrit! I still remember your first video. I was so glad that KZbin recommended it to me. Been watching you quietly, ever since. But, this video really affected me, so I wanted to say something. Thanks for making this. I know it probably wasn't intended to make my thoughts go in this direction, however, as a fellow content creator, I keep being told to 'niche down' and I didn't want to paint myself into a corner by getting bored or running out of things to say. I didn't have the vocabulary to express how I was feeling. Now, I understand that what I've been trying to say is that I don't want to be a specialist. I want to be a generalist and be allowed to explore all corners of my chosen world. Getting to where I want to go may take longer. We know how the algorithm is. But, people are still finding, watching and subscribing to me, so it shows me that there isn't just one right way to do things; not just one way to live. So, thanks for inspiring me, Scrit, as one writer to another! Hope you have a great day! ((o(^^)o))
@neond00mАй бұрын
I'm only 12 minutes into this video and it's honestly very captivating and inspiring. I never considered myself a generalist because since childhood I have spent so much time on game development as a skill, but as I watch this I'm realizing I have this ability to learn new things fast. I remember trying many new things and quickly becoming better then others, but never becoming the best at anything and looked at it as a failure. Thanks for changing my views on that.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Yeah mate, it's difficult getting a job with our limited knowledge on 100 topics, since the world is getting more and more specialised. That makes us feel like a failure. And trust me, a lot of people will tell you. Because people don't like when you are not walking the same trodden path as them. But trust me, if you can find the right kind of business/job, all those things we know are gonna come in real handy. You can be a one man show. I mean, everyone can benefit by understanding their own and other's psychology and personal finance and marketing themselves or their products. Like in your case, your game.
@ant39172 ай бұрын
nah the bigger youtuber is always right so your wrong
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
Bigger number better person.
@entangledatoms71532 ай бұрын
1984.
@Phrixys2 ай бұрын
@@ScritRightermore known, more trust 💪
@BlackenedGoldАй бұрын
Thankyou to everyone bringing an highlighting these beautifully articulated points, enjoyed the comment section too, good community here you've built up love to be apart of it.
@fogblades68112 ай бұрын
I don't mind being a Specialist at all. To me, being a Specialist gives me something simple and focused to strive being the best that I can be in a particular field. Being a Generalist is valuable, but to me, I always knew what I wanted to do very early in my life, so it never really made me look outside of my own viewpoint. This video is an interesting watch!
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Yes, we totally need both kinds. The issue is, there's no great way to quantify the degrees and contributions of the generalist. And neither are there many jobs that appreciate them and pay them accordingly. Like let's say you're in field X where you started learning from 1 and the best can be 10 on that scale. As you do your degree, masters, job, 5 years experience, 15 years experience, on that scale, you keep going up from 5, 6, 7, 8 and so on. But if I know somewhat about a 100 topics (but more than most), I don't think a company fully understands how to quantify the skill levels on that same scale or if it's even a requirement for them.
@neolastic71029 күн бұрын
I resonate with the video. It's okay not be the best at everything, but always do ur best and be proud of it.
@JonathanTashАй бұрын
16:45 No one is a true generalist either because there's always a whole world of stuff you never realized there was to be skilled at.
@BigMoneyChink2 ай бұрын
Jesus man its like you spoke how ive been feeling for years. Thank you for clarity
@raptorboss66882 ай бұрын
7:09 Based channel with goated content
@prosamis21 күн бұрын
Lovely video and take on the topic! This is one of the main things I liked about Aristotle's philosophy (that fulfillment comes from doing things for their own sake) over Plato (who heavily believed in specialization and thought the best citizen is one that masters their craft and does nothing but their craft) Though I like Plato's perspective on a bunch of things, this is one I always had a gut feeling opposing it
@roguetheoutlander88002 ай бұрын
How did i thought it would be about animals
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
aint that a hoot?
@Lighitup62 ай бұрын
@@ScritRighter no. It’s cruel and unnecessary
@guyalmate2 ай бұрын
That's interesting to say the least
@IisLasagna2 ай бұрын
TierZoo brainrot is real
@Lighitup62 ай бұрын
@@IisLasagna just like you. It’s stalkable
@NatediggetydogАй бұрын
That first segment really hit me. I’ll get a massive wave of motivation anytime I start a new job or project, or start a new skill. I feel that I can learn the basics of a new skillset much faster than the average person even; unfortunately, I also begin to plateau and lose interest much faster than the average person would. Idk what type of job field involves doing a huge variety of slightly challenging tasks, but I think it’d be the perfect one for me.
@tsunamio77502 ай бұрын
2:45 No, people did not feel like you building cars. They saw what they were building, they saw people driving those cars. Cars were new, they saw themselves building the future of mankind. They were proud, enthusiast and had a visual impact on the world.
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
Ford doesn't know you, dude.
@tsunamio77502 ай бұрын
@@ScritRighter ... U sure? ...
@germanulrichАй бұрын
Sure, the workers on a cellphone assembly line feel exactly how you say. They are on the razors edge of technology, building the future of mankind, surely that trumps any wish of gouging their eyes out with a spoon after hours of monotonous work.
@tsunamio7750Ай бұрын
@@germanulrich Nah, phones are already old now. And they are Chinese slaves. Workers in the old USA got to be in town and jazz with the ladies after work. They had homes cheaper than we'd ever dream of. Those were different times. Nowadays, we work like mules for a half the prize. Shit job workers had home, homie. We engineers and high productivity powertool experts will never be able to afford a home of our own until we're too old to benefit from it.
@CarlosMartinez-nj4wqАй бұрын
@tsunamio7750 you really think that all factory workers were just living it up back then? Labor laws were also different back then, as were safety regulations. Not to mention the fact that anything gets old I'd you do it enough, even if you really do just love cars, you could only do the same assembly line job for so long without getting at least a bit bored of the monotony
@jj_the_entАй бұрын
Thank you. this, sorta unrelated to the direct contents of the video itself, helped me realize something. i draw as a hobby, i occasionally game, i occasionally write but overwhelmingly my hobby is drawing i like to use spreadsheets and roll charts to help with ideas and such too but recently ive felt burnt out and weird and... this made me truly sit and think to myself, think about my projects and my goals and my spreadsheets and such and go "... is this why we started?" is this why i started drawing? to sit and slam my head against spreadsheet formulas and goals of grandiose writing and trying to express some burning core of me? is that why it was fun? and well... no. i started drawing since before i can remember and it was... because i was bored. it was for fun- no spreadsheets, no roll charts, no projects, no goals id doodle away on my paper for hours and have a blast- and this helped me remember that- i think im gonna go draw something now. and probably put another one of these videos on in the background. Thank you.
@unknowngojira7422 ай бұрын
bro i did not know there was a microsoft excel championship💀
@purplevanilla18 күн бұрын
just wait till you hear about "Sleep Championship"
@l1vef1re90Ай бұрын
I'm surprised nobody else said this yet but the use of the Danganronpa soundtrack when talking about specialists is actually so well thought out. I appreciate the symbolism. Loved the video, can't wait to see more! :)
@Zawoalowany23 күн бұрын
Isnt there Tekken ost in there aswell?
@leandrobenitez2922 ай бұрын
there are people who just do not want to speciallice in anything, unmotivated people caring for nothing but their own hedonism unwilling to put the extra effort into anything, people who see any kind of work as a chore regardless of the task, people who enjoy the comfort and security of predictable monotony. people who can shut down their mind while their muscle memory works like automatons dumbasses complaining that all they do is tigthen screws for 8 hours straight don't know how good they have it
@boxoid52302 ай бұрын
- Evil Corporate CEO
@nasfoda_gamerbrbigproducti53752 ай бұрын
@@leandrobenitez292 It's that people like this exist
@relariis_the_paradoxАй бұрын
I'm a generalist and it has always been both my best and my worst quality. It has allowed me to be a person who is very multifaceted and able to take on a lot of different or complex projects and responsibilities, usually better than my more specialized peers, but it also has worsened my time inefficiencies because I'm very passionate about many different things and always pulled in different directions. Also props for using the persona 4 sound track and clips from Osu! in the vid.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
I think a lot of us generalists have ADHD, maybe you don't, but it really messes with our time management.
@relariis_the_paradoxАй бұрын
@@danlightened Nah guilty as charged with the ADHD time blindness fr
@danlightenedАй бұрын
@@relariis_the_paradox Hehe..has anything helped? I've thought of using to do lists and even things like Trello but instead the breakdown of tasks being easy, seeing it overwhelms me.
@relariis_the_paradoxАй бұрын
@@danlightened Idk what Trello is but I use to-do lists where my first task is always to make the list, sort tasks by priority and impact on my life, and I break big tasks down into smaller tasks so I can visibly see progress I'm making as I make it. I also use Google Calendar, and I sync it with my Samsung phone calendar, which gives me an alarm-style notification any time I have a reminder for an event. Other than that, get meds for any mental illnesses that cause/exacerbate executive dysfunction (I can't get ADHD stimulant meds though cause of medical complications, though that works wonders for some people I know), make sure to take them as consistently as possible, and hope for the best.
@longphan76562 ай бұрын
Wow another video about generalist having both inferiority and superiority complex I’m not a specialist by any means but I feel like there’s just this trend going around of demoralizing a group of people for no reason Tell me do you even know the stat of how much specialist and generalist there are in society? Cause if we go by your definition that a generalist only master one thing and have absolutely no skill or no joy in THOUSANDS of other fields, then that would take up like less than 10% of the population. You are the 90% that constantly demoralizing the 10%, and tell me when was the last time you see any specialist making all these stupid quotes about generalists? All I’m seeing is generalist crying wolf about a problem that don’t exist to make themselves look better Most of the time people will always be generalist that is specialist in one field or maybe more. There is rarely a 100% generalist or specialist aka your so called "master of one" and "master of none"
@hexdiqoreprime79742 ай бұрын
Nah, bruh.
@kionyfey77402 ай бұрын
I don’t believe the goal of the video was to demoralize anyone. Nobody said anything bad about specialists. I feel you’re taking the title to an extreme and disturbing the contents of the video in bad faith.
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
@@kionyfey7740 *Coughs at the changed title for clickbait reasons* Y-Yeah!
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
My main point is that there are no true specialists and that the concept of specialization is an unachievable ideal which does not account for human emotion and thought. We are all generalists even if we might exceed at one or two tasks. The closer I've seen someone become to a specialist, the more miserable they seem to be in my eyes. I doubt me 'demoralizing' the specialists is the reason they are not happy with their lives.
@netherlord59592 ай бұрын
@@ScritRighterhonestly I did enjoy the video, but I did have a couple things I'd disagree with. First that having less free time was caused by more specialized economic models, which I'd say is just a correlation not a causation, since the economic changes have caused both but there could potentially also be a specialist society with more free time (especially considering improvements in automation and machine learning). The other thing is that the terms specialist/generalist and the discourse around them get quite polarizing without enough nuance, as humans are quite complex. From my pov it is a great idea to be curious and branch out, though the original comment does bring up a valid criticism of people deluding themselves they're a generalist as an excuse to not commit to anything in particular. The point of breadth of knowledge is indeed a great one tho and even in scientific research very often is a key factor for new discoveries, as well as considering the human life only getting longer it helps to have more things to learn so I'd also agree there that branching out is great for that too. For me I would say that everything has an exciting story behind it, if only we are able to look past the surface.
@thundermota1158Ай бұрын
Also the process is ruthless, i needed to hear this big thanks
@regnbuetorskАй бұрын
we find ourselves in front of tasks requiring specialized skills very few times in our lives. we can fix so many things with just basic/intermediate knowledge
@wayfarerzen23 күн бұрын
AYY THOR CALLOUT I knew him 10 years ago before he started working on the game. Dude's awesome.
@mmikael281Ай бұрын
In order to be a true master at something, you have to be good at one thing and know the basics of everything around it. The most important part is the surrounding supporting information because it is the key to problem solving and creativity.
@petersanders3311Ай бұрын
As an Economics/Quantitative Data Analytics major I love how you hit the nail on the head about the flaw in the economic models most people use for optimization. Shit is efficient but also mind numbingly terrible, you captured the vibe that comes when labors connection to their creations are fragmented for the sake of efficiency. I don't know if you were a economics major or something adjacent but it brings me a bit of joy that the field is finally starting to move towards questioning the consequences of these models.
@ScritRighterАй бұрын
Data analytics and marketing, mainly.
@zzomwАй бұрын
Legendary video! I can totally relate to doing 50 hours a week of office work. I left there and now have more time to spend on learning new skills and investing in better things. Instead of working 50 hours a week and earning the minimum wage, I was the person everyone dumped their work on because I know too much and am much faster and more skilled than all of them.
@SlickEvanАй бұрын
With the presentation, and voice, I was already seated, but the dangan music? I'm hooked.
@GabrielVitor-kq6ujАй бұрын
Im a generalist, I have been called encyclopedia or Wiki before... cuz just about any subject, I have at least a basic knowledge on it. And I tell ya, yeah individually that's great, but we do need specialists too. Both are important in the great scheme of things.
@louisveran243921 күн бұрын
As a programmer, an artist and a musician, I felt happy to hear you say "could also be an amazing game dev" as I started working on my indie game a few month ago. By the way "game dev" is a very "generalist" skill, since, for a solo dev, you need to be able to : - code - make music - make 3D assets - make materials/2D art - animate - actualy create interesting gameplay (game design) - write (for story) And I'm sure I'm missing some
@paolosavino22Ай бұрын
I always considered myself a generalist. I like to do a lot of things and I kinda lack focus. The constant rotation of interests keep them fresh and exciting to work on everytime. For a lot of time i envied my specialist friends. They are good, like really good, at what they focus on. On the flip side I can have a conversation with them all and understand everything they talk about. And this is great! I acquire new information everytime and I know a lot more everytime. I also think that the sum of our skill is the most important day to day. Also skills scale logarithmically, is easier to gain proficiency in one skill at the begginer stage than in the expert stage.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
That's why knowing the basics or being at an intermediate level is awesome. You get what the experts say. And what an expert says is 10-20-30 years of experience and knowledge culminating into a few minutes of conversation. It's like gold.
@ziga1122Ай бұрын
17:15 As for the David Goggins example, he's not a specialist either, he doesn't solely focus on running. He always searches for new challenges i.e. smoke jumping, EMT,...
@lazyangel607727 күн бұрын
A kind of mantra I like to repeat to myself when starting a new thing is "Let yourself be a beginner" To remind myself that I have to take the steps to learn and have fun before I can judge myself for being bad at an obviously new skill.
@MarinaEliseBlakeАй бұрын
LOVE the tekken 6 watery forest ost! Keep up the good work :>
@matijaderetic3565Ай бұрын
Nice video, makes a lot of sense and I have similar views. That said, I think specialization is a way to generalization. Get good at sth but look at the bigger picture, see all the puzzle pieces and how they connect. Also, being the go to guy/gal for some type of work can make you more appreciated with your peers. Then again, lack of generality can bottleneck/limit your speciality.
@MilesHornbyАй бұрын
Not every difficult and dangerous thing is suitable for training, but only that which is conducive to success in achieving the object of our effort.
@ktvx.94Ай бұрын
12:43 hit man, I'm an artist, programmer and musician hoping to make their first full indie game. I actually teach game development and worked a few jobs in the industry but still owe it to myself to build something of my own.
@jullcepts87802 ай бұрын
I want to expand on your point about specialization vs generalization. I agree with your point but usually those people that make a living doing many things... Usually those people started by getting renown by doing one thing. There's a balance to things. Specialize forever on one thing only and you'll lock yourself forever. Try to learn and do everything and you'll be less likely to grasp the amount of things you'll likely want to learn. I think is best to have 1 or 2 things that you're known for, but also always look to learn new things. Using myself as an example. I'm an architect by profession. That's what I graduated, that's what I (for now) pay the bills with. But I'm also a concept artist. I like to design environments I'd love to see in a videogame one day. But I also know about 3D modelling for 3D printing and done a few designs myself. I've also dabbled into game dev and game art and have done stylized game ready assets and I once programmed a prototype on Godot just to experiment. I also make characters sometimes. But my main focus is architecture and concept art. So yeah, don't get stuck into doing one thing and only one thing. Yet don't try to do eeeeeeverything right out of the gate.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Architect here as well. The design fields are wild. Anyone from any arts and design field, can go into another. At least, that's what I've witnessed. I think only 1/4th of batchmates are practicing architecture. Some are UI/UX, some in experiential design such as that of mall/retail or expos. Some are in different types of product design. And some do interior design or construction management or photography or digital art or graphic design or 3D rendering.
@rosspena201011 күн бұрын
One of the best lines I've ever heard in the movie and see if you can figure out which movie it is when you over specialized you breed in weakness
@LanceLambert-b3q13 күн бұрын
Be glad of life because it gives you the chance to love, to work, to play, and to look up at the stars.
@liomurasakiАй бұрын
It depends on your personality, i love doing the same over and over, knowing what will come, having control over the process because i know what to do
@ka_okai9Ай бұрын
Thats kinda friky my guy. xD
@taylorwalker7282Ай бұрын
Agree with most of what your saying. Perhaps the best generalist though are those who temporarily become specialists or chose a specialty that broadens them into many things more efficiently. As a smart dead samurai once said, "From one thing, know ten thousand things". But maybe this was the point you were making. Either way, I had a good time.
@The_Natalist15 күн бұрын
7:25 my entire generation runs on Pokemon BW background music i swear 😂
@shadowboy012622 күн бұрын
I tend to get burnt out on individual tasks quicker than most. My soul is filled with an ever present wanderlust that calls on me to keep moving. Dont like staying in one place for too long, dont like doing the same thing for too long. I MUST be breaking up the monotony of my life else my depression claws at my mind and fills me with this feeling of being stuck and wasting time. Thus I am a generalist of sorts. Im an artist but Im an artist in many ways. The degree im working towards is called Collaborative Media so i've taken classes on commercial design, typography, photography, videography, photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, layout, 3D modeling, web design, previsualization, and many more. I draw, write, and also know a bit of metal and wood working. If its an art or craft, i take interest. Granted i havent retained everything I've learned but this degree has been wildly helpful in letting me know what kinds of things i actually want to do with my life for a career. Photography is fun and depending on the kind, can keep me moving. Concept Illustration is something i do for myself for fun anyway, it pays well, and that money would give me the opportunity to do other things i find joy in. Travel, hobbies, etc.
@darktimesatrockymountainhi4046Ай бұрын
Generalist, here! It is so true that generalists use prior knowledge to help them learn new things! My mom always reminded me that “a jack of all trades is a master of none,” but I always realized she was wrong. I became a musician & music teacher, but I did not remain with a particular specialization. By the time I graduated high school, I played violin, double bass, recorder, and bassoon, and I learned all the instrument transpositions. Went to college on scholarships in band & orchestra, and I doubled on instruments in the pit during operas & musicals. I took lessons on all my instruments, and they made me learn piano. After college, I took up the viola & cello, and I later became an orchestra director, so I had to get familiar with trumpet, French horn, trombone, tuba, percussion, flute, and clarinet. Soon, I’ll learn the oboe. While it’s true I did not “master” most of those instruments, at 63 years old, I’m a pretty good player & I know how to teach them. In particular, I use math, science, language, and music to understand everything better, and it helps me teach them better!
@TheTdroidАй бұрын
Very interesting video. At first I thought about video games, especially class based video games, but even then I feel like this tend to apply when I think about it. Let's say someone is playing a Rogue in World of Warcraft. Assassin or something, IDK. You'd think that they only need to know how the Rogue works in whatever content they're running, and you can get decently far wtih just that. But if you apply that thinking to everyone in the raid, you get a bunch of people incapable of adjusting to make everyone else's jobs easier as well. If the Rogue player also knows the basics of how tanking and healing works in said content, they can adjust their choices to also help them be more effective or efficient. My impression is that a lot of mid level raiders (in lots of MMOs really, not just WoW) don't really have this broad understanding and rely on a few people directing the whole show. So you end up with people specialized in making everyone play more like generalists.
@dexlovesgames_dlgАй бұрын
Oh my god i've 1000% thought about this. Anyone doing 1 tiny specific task over and over will become more efficient at it, but it will get so boring, but if you're doing everything you can't get efficient at anything and the task doesn't get done. one is more enjoyable, the other is more useful. no way around it seemingly :/
@ExtremelyErgonomicАй бұрын
Thoroughly enjoyed this, earned a like and all, and I'll check out the other fellows take on this as well soon.
@jesusortega36742 ай бұрын
I thank you for the teaching and wish you fulfillment.
@agodelianshock94222 ай бұрын
I work in animation, film, game design, etc... Despite multiple strikes and crises the last few years I've been able to jump between industries with relative ease and stay employed with a decent salary. I call my specialization Technical Animation or Technical Art on my resume but in reality I do whatever I need to do. No need to put myself in a little box and wait until I die for a perfect job to come along. I'll fit whatever is available with a weekend of work and a new resume.
@ScritRighter2 ай бұрын
It is funny how most companies require you to categorize yourself with a specialization, only to cross train and make sure you know how to do other people's jobs too.
@JAA_00722 күн бұрын
Solid take, and thank you for sharing
@cameronmclennan942Ай бұрын
Really nicely done. A good thought exercise. Would have liked to see hpw you make that framework fit for fundamental science/medical research and development. The same arguments could be used, but the level of specialisation and time required becomes a lot higher than for many of the examples used
@Tucanae14 күн бұрын
as someone who when asked "Whats your hobby?" responds "Gathering hobbies" this video is amazing.
@soulezwan26616 күн бұрын
Reminds me of a saying i heard... "2 in harmony surpassed one of perfection"
@danielrego81Ай бұрын
Im a med student and in my area the great specialists know a lot about areas that "out" of their expertise. As an example, a great psychiatrist has to know a lot about endocrine, neuro, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, primary care and even social science. In a way, to be a great specialist, you have to be a great generalist.
@RobPetersen-o7b27 күн бұрын
Creatives typically have high trait openness and sub trait novelty seeking. Naturally this is anathema to specializing since that feels stultifying and soul crushing. Speaking from experience.
@meeb_consumer2 ай бұрын
The skills of a good generalist complement eachother.
@ryanlazuli6Ай бұрын
Interesting you bring up farming, cause there's an analogous situation with monocultures. Monoculture farming is specializing in just one crop and it is devastating to the environment- damages the soil, increases risk of contamination, and impacts biodiversity.
@sobreaverАй бұрын
It goes along with the growth curve. 80% in 20%. And it takes a lot of focus/dedication to keep going on the upper flat line growth to learn/master just one more thing whereas you turn around, pick any other direction and whoop, in just a small amount of time, you can grow yourself about 80% of what can be learned/mastered in the direction, but if you want more, it'll scrap off a much bigger portion of your time that you could have otherwise invested in another direction and get another 80% efficiency out of 20% invested time. Unless you are particularly and specifically driven to some goal, eventually, the best you can do with your time is to truly transcend AND remember everything you do with your lifetime at EVERY SINGLE MOMENT, because it only happens once, doing it again and again is reinvesting a limited resource, the same everyone have and is limited just the same way, TIME. Whatever you do, you have a very short amount of time for doing it. There is no need to panic about it, we are ALL fk the same way. But I will say it is most notoriously an illusive concept to the youth who cannot possibly understand from experience the value of the time that is passing, considering the eventual wearing off ;) They feel eternal until they don't, don't worry, we all did.
@danlightenedАй бұрын
Yeah, that's why I love learning around 50-60% of many topics. The only issue is, that's usually not enough to get a job tho. Such had been the world since the last few decades; more and more specialised roles. As someone in 30s and already having an existential crisis, I wasn't ready for your last paragraph. 😅
@nester7315Ай бұрын
13:24 I read interesting text about that not so long ago, and that's an interesting paradox. In order to write good you need to write less. You're sharing your experiences through the text, and the more you have the better. The people who are just writing are not engaging in life, they're observers, meanwhile smb who doesn't know all the rules may still show you the life that he'd lived. Words (and generalising pictures, code, frames etc) are tools, but in order to create art you still need wood, paper, ink or something else to work with.
@througtonsheirs_doctorwhol5914Ай бұрын
if i had been RPG specialist, i would neverhave got a 100% completion on The Messenger, or Super Blood Hockey, but i am a retro-gamer generalist, with specilized passions for styles. Likewise,having got my 1st degree as an analyst programmer, then one in litterature, and learning music all my life on the side, drawing all my life, i amassed the skills to build a small indie game for a personal project. I'll be working on this this year
@jacktasticone6151Ай бұрын
I love how he described how alienation affects us through this gamer adjacent topic.