Attentiveness, and the neuroscience of how the Brain enforces it

The selectively focused, attention aware brain 

The brain's ability to hone in on a particular stimulus (or a group of) amid a cacophony of stimuli is endlessly intriguing. For the longest time, neuroscientists thought that the brain's prefrontal cortex (hereafter PFC) shone a spotlight on the stimulus that is deemed essential, selectively ignoring what is considered extraneous. Francis Crick (human DNA) theorized that the thalamus, a more interior (and thus ancient) part of the brain, is involved in receiving information and deciding which sensory inputs to pass along and which to gate. 

More recently, researchers found that such ancient regions as the thalamus and basal ganglia are involved, but the essential participants here are the thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN). The TRN wraps around the thalamus and is engaged in suppressing sensory inputs when the person is asleep. Similarly, it allows a person to focus on the task at hand by ignoring the unnecessary sensory streams to the brain. It doesn't just do this by turning sensory streams off as required, but also has the elegance and the fine-tuned control to selectively stream sensory data. It can selectively tune background noise out, allowing you to hone into the voice of the person you are speaking to. 

Researchers at MIT verified this on mice by training them on a goal (run on a track) directed by their response to specific audio and light signals. They found that if a task required visual senses, turning those senses fully on, negatively affected their performance. More interestingly, the same act also affected their ability to focus on the auditory senses. This is because the neurons are being selectively silenced, not being excited as conventionally thought.

The TRN wraps the thalamus, which is right next to the basal ganglia, interior parts of the brain, and some of the brain's oldest components. Some of the oldest fish which retain their original brain structure through evolution have basal ganglia that aid in attention. Attention, which can be thought to be the set of activities that need to happen in a certain order and making sure you don't get distracted by things you shouldn't be is then not a byproduct of the PFC, (the shiny new human-specific part of the brain) but an eons-old process that optimized your chances of survival while also preventing an analysis paralysis. 

This exciting finding could leak information about consciousness, what it is, and the mechanics of how we have it. Another assumption that has come into question is the brain being a passive sensory input machine, whereas it turns out that the brain takes an active role in choosing which sensory data (information) to process. The flicker of an eye, or the twitch of a finger may play part in the active reconstruction of our surrounding. 

It is also important to note that ancient structures like the basal ganglia probably didn't evolve filters to protect against social media and electronic notifications. Humanity has collectively developed ADHD through the dopamine inducing stream of electronic data synthesized in a data-science lab to sneak by your hyper-vigilant TRN and basal ganglia to force attention focus. Aren't these interventions starting to sound uncannily like a virus?

Source: https://www.quantamagazine.org/to-pay-attention-the-brain-uses-filters-not-a-spotlight-20190924

[RMs] Meditation and its power in regulating the pre-frontal cortex

My understanding of meditation and its impact from the perspective of a reformed skeptic 

My mom tried to get me to do yoga and meditate since my late teens. I was a mischievous, distracted, and disobedient kid. Call it the teenage hormonal changes, immature maturity, or whatever else; according to my mom, I needed help. Since psychological interventions were out of the question, she enrolled me in a meditation and yoga class. I picked up some basics but never really took to it, at least not like my mom. 

She started yoga and meditation to accompany me into picking the habit up (lol) but ended up finding deep meaning in it. She pursued yoga and meditation for many many years to truly understand its nuances. She overcame severe stage fright and doubt stemming from her unfinished education and fluency issues with English to become a yoga teacher. One of her biggest gripes has been that she failed to get both her kids into yoga. Well, that changed a few months ago, at the height of the pandemic (at least for one of her kids). 

Onset: 

The pandemic has been a period of intense learning. I broke from the personal and professional schedules to spend time with myself. In my isolation, I reignited my passion for learning and creating. I immigrated to SF to ensconce myself in the lifeblood of global tech innovation, to work with the smallest startups taking on audacious challenges, and ultimately to build something of impact myself. The pandemic was my fodder, and I zeroed in an idea that I loved, felt I could dedicate 10 years of my life to, and answer the question "why me." I'll write about that in a separate post, but suffice to say I was excited. 

Soon, though, anxiety joined along for the ride. I felt my passion being consumed by a rotten apple of anxiety. I was stuck questioning the idea, whether anybody would find it useful, that it was too derivative and whether VCs would ever invest. I was also a solo founder and slowly realized how incredibly lonely it is to start a company while also working a full-time taxing job. This all came to a head one evening when I had a full-blown panic attack. 

I got scared, I thought I was dying, that I couldn't breathe and that I needed to call 911 to help me out of my stroke or else I would die. Luckily a friend on the phone recognized my symptoms and guided me out of it. It still took an hour to run its course, and I was pretty shaken up on the other side. I knew I had to do something, and one of the things I picked up and started doing was meditation. Long story short, it has been incredibly helpful. I am going to talk about meditation from the perspective of a reformed skeptic. 


Meditation - how to do:

When they think of meditation, most people in the West imagine sitting in silence with your thoughts, taking deep breaths, and chanting "Aum." While that is a great starting point, real meditation is more involved, especially in the beginning. Meditation is the most complete exercise for a human. Yoga and pranayam are the respective preparations of your body and your breath to finally mediate. Pranayam is the process of exercising your internal organs, and most importantly, bringing breath under your control. While not inordinately complex to teach, it takes diligent effort to become good at synchronizing your breathing to a count. Here are the things that you permute with pranayama - both nostrils, left nostril, right nostril, mouth, breathing and holding your breath (at full as well as at empty). You permute and combine these in various ways. E.g.:

  • Close your right and inhale through you left nostril, hold at the highest, and exhale through your right 
  • Calmly inhale and forcibly exhale (almost making a grunt like sound)  
  • Inhale through both nostrils, alternate exhale between left and right nostril (while holding for 6 seconds when your lungs are empty)

There are many other variations of these, each with their own benefit. For example, "Bhastrika," as #2 above is called, is followed by a period that your brain is completely silent. It is a beautiful feeling. 


From skeptic to a believer:

I am interested in neuroscience and the human brain, I read up on anxiety, trauma, and depression and their effect on our brain. Here's what I found and what I intuited (sorry not going to differentiate between the two, if anybody ends up reading this and wants more info hmu). 

The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is the newest part of our brain; it differentiates us from other animals and is responsible for our ability to see and decipher patterns. It is evolutionarily the most recent, influenced more by the environment than genes. The cities we live in, the mega-structures we build, and the things we create to push humanity forward emerge from this area. It has given us so much, but it also has a dark side. For you see, the PFC likes pattern-recognition so much so, that it defaults to it for everything. 

This incessant need to compare yourself to others (helped by social media bombardment) is seated in this area. Your PFC is not satisfied with the work you are doing; it needs to know whether it is good or bad. Since the PFC does not have the data-points to judge, it defaults to comparing to people you see in the (social) media. Media portrayal is overrepresented by the already successful, the fake, or the loud ones - a difference that your PFC does not see. Your PFC can't help but look at how far ahead these people are and compare your achievements and progress. It belittles your effort, your speed of execution, the validity of your idea, and your hopeless optimism. It is a perpetual motion machine fueled by doubt. 

That's with anxiety - being stuck in the future. Depression in a similar vein is the mind being stuck in the past, if not a more debilitating condition. Your constant need to compare, seek approval, and diminished confidence can be attributed to the PFC. The PFC constructs your ego, which, in a way, is you containing your sense of self to a psychological husk created out of your own shortcomings. You live, breathe, and operate in this world through that limiting husk. Doesn't that sound like a terrible way to live?

Meditation is you taking time to be one with your breath. It is one of the essentials to life that you can control. You can't adjust your heartbeat, but your breath and the delivery of life-sustaining oxygen is within your regulatory control. By focusing on your breath, you observe the flow of chakra (prana, life source, energy). Your breath is a marvelous thing, so many parasympathetic responses are connected to it. Feeling nervous - observe your breath; you will find that it is shallow. Practice bringing your breath under control, and you will see your nerves rest. 

Meditation is you bringing your PFC under your control. Asking it to stop trying to live in anything but the present, deeply realize that the past is immovable and the future, a hallucination. Meditation helped me understand that the only real thing we all have is time. Consciousness is possibly our ability to perceive time and affect outcomes. You are not racing anybody; if you have a higher goal or a more profound interest, cherish that knowledge; not everybody knows theirs. The journey is all we have, and choosing for the journey and not the goal is key to living a life outside regret. You become kinder to yourself (gosh darn it took me a long time to understand what people meant when they said this). Your anxiety is replaced by a sense of subtle urgency. You know your time is running out. Life's greatest joy is the privilege of deciding what this unrestrained self of yours should focus its time on. 

Journey along, and I hope to meet some of you on the way. 








[RMh] 'Super Saiyan Ultra instinct' Goku and Taoism

DragonballZ and Taoism 

One of the central tenets of Taoism is the concept of flow, a state of joy, unparalleled, when all of your mental faculties come to focus on a task, your sense of time goes away as you feel the joy that comes from being in love with what you are doing. It is in these states that your mind is doing some of it's most unperturbed, creative, and efficient thinking. You are going with the "flow" - not planning ahead, not superimposing your fears and anxieties, being totally present and taking every moment in as it comes, staying genuinely curious. You give in, and you do some of the best living of your short life. 

Dragonballz has had a childhood hold on me. Grew up watching, some of the most rewatched anime of my life (and i used to watch a lot). It is still on air and recent arcs have been awesome! Some of my favorite of the long series. There is much more thought given to power, and how "screaming into the air" for an episode, while the villain just looks on politely waiting. It is deeper. The final form is called "Ultra Instinct" in this state the fighter gains the ultimate speed by giving up on control and just letting the body be. It was mucles and senses taking control, reacting to senses and not to the plannings of the mind. Forget the speed advantage from removing brain from the loop, it was a whole new way of fighting, even the gods were amazed. 

I would not be surrpised to find out that Akira Toriyami (author) may have drawn inspiration from the Taoist principles.

So yeah, this guy Goku is a deeply practicing Taoist and i thought that was interesting enough to record for posterirty.  

Boiling Power Super Saiyan Goku  Dragon Ball Z Dokkan Battle Wiki  Fandom

[RMs] Quantum observation and the Monty Hall Problem

My introduction to the Monty Hall Problem was not pretty. There were some logical inconsistencies that the young me could not "fully" wrap my mind around. I recently explored quantum theory, particularly the observer effect on a waveform, and something clicked in place about the problem that I will try to explain here. 

Monty Hall is a game show host, and he is famous for the eponymous problem. It is a probabilistic puzzle masquerading as a game show; here's how it goes:

  • You are the participant in a game show where you can win a car or a goat. You want the car, NOT the goat. 
  • There are three closed doors in front of you; behind one of the closed doors is a car, while the other two hide a goat each. 
  • You are asked to guess behind which is the car.
  • The host, who knows everything, opens one of the doors revealing a goat behind it. So now you're left with two doors.
  • Do you want to stay with your choice or switch? 

At first sight, it doesn't seem prudent to switch because probabilities have not changed - the initial likelihood of picking the door with a car is 1/3. However, now that new data is revealed, it sets in motion a new game and you have to update your probabilities. You were 2/3 likely to have picked the goat in the first round of guessing, so by revealing a goat Monty is telling you where the car is. If you had chosen the door with the car, though, you would lose by switching, but the probability of that from the previous game was lower, at 1/3. So if you approach the problem from a Bayesian perspective, where new data updates the decision model, you would benefit by switching. 

This was not intuitive for a long time; I couldn't see how the game changed if irrelevant data was revealed (the car door is never opened). More fundamentally, I did not see how a new game was set in motion. A basic understanding of quantum mechanics, notably string theory helped the concept click into place. 

In the nano-scale world of quantum mechanics, the most fundamental particles are probabilistic waves passing down time-strings (approximation). It is the act of observation that determines their position, and in the process transforms the wave function. 

The wave looking thing is a string vibration passing along minding its own business, and the little clock is what we use to observe the particle. Notice how the wave was smooth, but the instant we observe and thus "determine" it, the wave function changes. Our observation changes the waveform, and if we are all waves, then that change affected the nearby vibrations. These changes propagate through adjoint strings and affect reality. 

That's what happens when the host opens one of the doors, new information is revealed, and the change wrought about by observing, ripples through to start a new game. The impact of observation on creating new realities is profound when you attempt to wrap your head around. It was interesting how my mind immediately went to the Monty Hall Problem and updated my understanding. In a way, my watching it changed me. 

Many questions persist around why watching that had that impact on me and not say on my friend. What about the time-string configurations in my body led to that specific response.



[RM] time strings and quantum probabilities

Subject - time strings 

(current status of a developing understanding of quantum mechanics)

We, the universe and everything that inhabits it is made of atoms, which we considered to be the building blocks of matter. Recently, the substructures of atoms started becoming visible to human observation. Some sub-particles bestow us our mass, the famed god-particle. Quarks, leptons, bosons, and other name particles grant other characteristics, including charge (or the lack thereof). 

However, when observing particles at that scale, another curious characteristic shows up that has long confounded us about light. The smallest particles are waveforms, vibrations on a time string (or is time the vibration on a photonic string). While we deterministically exist, the smallest particles only probabilistically do. The act of observation determines them; this shows up on the waveform plot too. 

These time strings seem able to affect each other, groups of them even gaining sentience - the ability to perceive the flow of time and evolve to human beings, who, in addition to observing, can intentionally affect. Human beings evolved through this chaos to perceive the interactions of the time threads, our sense of sound, smell, sight, touch, and taste were maybe the most important dimensions of these interactions for us to perceive. 

If collectively, every human, animal, and organism that can observe time cease their sensory inputs, does the universe in its infinitely large form revert to a wave state? Put another way, does the earth and all the activity in it exist deterministically because of one of these:

  • somebody is always observing, that act persists determines reality
  • stack on probabilities from the cosmic intercoupling of time strings, all the particles in you are vibrating but add the wave functions together and if you are the transformed wave output, and your probability of being recorded is always 1, in one of two ways:
    • all the particles show themselves individually but together
    • this "togetherness" induces a single probability function to all the intercoupled strings, so they exist together or don't exist at all, together 

More dimensions seem favorable for explaining:

  • how quantum pair-particles receive information about their twin's configuration at point (and event) of capture, irrespective of the distance between them. If the information is being passed, there is another dimension it is passing from; it doesn't 'miraculously' know  
  • the time strings interact with each other, our senses perceive these interaction magnitudes as the 5 senses. What additional information do these interactions encode, and is there a theoretical limit? (Shannon's information theory?) 

Meditators, gurus, and sadhus from early recorded history ask us to be one with the vibrations, feel the vibrations and make peace with it. I would not be surprised if they intuited it somehow. The world is so fantastically beautiful, that it is a privilege to exist and be given the greatest problem of all - a universe to explore and understand. 

Have humans evolved with the chaotic goal of reducing chaos, make sense of what we came from. Is our ultimate evolutionary goal to reduce entropy? 

the internet is overwhelming, shouldn't we be able to tune it down

I turned off my access to social media for the past 4-5 months, and seeing from the outside in, the things that seduce our attention, is horrifying. Our attention is at the behest of the internet giants - tech, media, and celebrities, and they 'earn' it by giving you a rush every time you interact with them. This is the synthetic kind, the manufactured rush of familiarity that is harmful to us in the long run, but hard to know in the moment. These mini dopamine rushes keep your engine whirring while you do nothing, creating an anxiety cycle from realizing every so often that you have been stationary. This is scarily similar to traditional drugs like cocaine, heroin, meth, and even more to soma from Huxley's 'Brave New World.' 

I found myself having more time, being more present and able to start peeking from the shackles of the conformity-loop, a happy side-effect of the internet we have no choice but to consume. As young apprentices out looking at the world, on a journey to find new highs at a pace we feel 'flow' at, we are fed and taught to seek out the stories of everybody we think is more successful than us or is doing more with their lives. Our brain likes structure, to impose a pattern induced model constructed to fit the evidence, drawn from sensory data. We start biasing our data set towards the 90th percentile (real snd the fakers) and normalize unreasonable standards. The internet companies are taking advantage of that; they pull you into the web and use the billions of hours of behavior data available to "increase retention" by sucking you deeper. They are taking away our creative forces by feeding us depression. 

I am scared by how much it had a hold on me.

As somebody who on the inside of these startups, knows backend architectures and how loose security at a growing company is, you are aware of just how much data customers leave behind as they traverse the internet. These bits, a like here, a comment, or a group, or a link you shared or a song you listened to, or a link that blew your mind away, a book you post a review about; it's all there, feeding computer algorithms. We should start by reclaiming that data, create our own data repositories of the 'internet we leave behind' that you can add to, invite to, and even create experiences through. 

Over the past month or so, I have been thinking about decentralized internet and how smaller self-contained pods could be the breakaway internets of the future. Power needs to be redistributed, so we stop creating "company-empires" benevolent so far, but far too powerful and unchecked. An internet you maintain for yourself, not to share with the world to get likes but because your brain told you that this was valuable to hold on to. All the data would live on your device or in your personal (portable) cloud.

I keep coming back to this idea of an internet reversal, where your behavior profile hangs out jobs to complete, and the internet finds the economic equilibrium cost to getting it fulfilled. A huge stock market, survival of the fittest. 

A good entry point is to make the capture of the internet easier, and thats what I am trying to solve with the MVP. As we continue to consume internet at bearkneck speeds, really absorbing almos nothing. The cutting edge of content is coming up on personal websites, self-authored content and we rarely remember to hold on to it. We need to start gathering, containing, and categorizing our traces of the internet. It is time we became foragers again, as we were built to be. 

Anyway, some thoughts...excited for the vision forming in my head but don't have it articulate enough. 

(The beginnings of a manifesto for the future of the internet) 

Random Musings - productivity, and how to ring it in?

Work, flow, and where magic happens

There are more complete definitions of the state of "flow," what I connected and felt true the most in this state are as follows:

  • your brain, in all its magnificence, is bought to focus on one task 
  • the easier the task, the easier it is to achieve this state of flow (eg: people do some of their best thinking when washing dishes)
  • the true power of flow is when you bring it to bear on more complex tasks, specifically that require multiple parts of your brain to collaborate (eg: writing, drawing, building products, learning, and in general acts of creation and synthesis) 

In certain ways, I liken it to your brain engaging it's "deep learning mode." Athletes train extensively to be able to react to baseball in less than 0.3 seconds. Your brain cannot analyze the ball, send signals to all the muscles to start the swing and effectively connect in that time. Instincts honed over years of training kick in and a pro-player's muscles react before a normal person has even analyzed the ball. This is a form of deep-learning, consistently training to do extremely well at that one thing. 

This "deep-learning" state then is a narrowing of perception, where you create the conditions that the brain feels safe, engaged and peaceful; so it can suspend it's need to monitor "root threads" and bring all that bandwidth to the task (user threads). 

Analyzing my own flow:

I find it hard to achieve flow when I am at home, it doesn't matter which room, how peaceful it is but I have find that my best work rarely happens in the comfort of my own home. Binaural-beats help, but randomly. Instead, I find I do better work when I am at any place that is not home. 

Cafes were my favorite places to go to work, I like white noise (crowd chatterings) that I can tune in and out at will. I like the access to coffee, seeing people work and people watching when taking a break. The pandemic fucked that up. 

Replacement candidates and their review: 

  • Roof - I have a pretty cool view of the city from the roof of my Bernal Hill apartment. It does get windy up there, and wind is not easy to work around. At night, with all lights off, in the black of the night, with little light-specs shaping the scenery, a hot green tea and a blanket to keep the chill at bay, has been conducive to achieving something close to a flow state. (Disadvantages) Only able to do this at like 11pm at night. 
  • Stairwell - literally the stairwell outside my apartment, because any place but my room. 
  • Walk in closet - very small, just enough for me to sit and trick myself into disassociating from my room that lies less than 5 feet away. Thank god I am not claustrophobic. Tried this a few times, and so far it has worked. 
  • A corner tea shop on the streets of India - I did some of my most important applications for school from a street store, where I would sit on a chair by the sidewalk and work on my laptop while a steady stream of daily laborers would come to drink tea, grab bites and take breaks from their work. They would stare, but soon enough I became friends with the regulars. I did some of my best work there. 

I think I associate home with distraction, the enjoyable kind - family, roommates, entertainment, reading, things that take me out of the moment. Meditation has been helping, it allows me to be present and makes getting into flow state more achievable. I need to double down on that, and in the meantime figure out the set of circumstances that are able to trigger flow at will. Wouldn't that be convenient?

Ted style talks and what I took away from them

Power foods for the brain - Neal Barnard 

Context: Dr. Barnard's father passed away due to Alzheimer's, so he understands and explains the way it ravages a human of their identity. If you lose your memories, you lose yourself. Current wisdom knows that this disease has a clear genetic base, your chances of getting it increasing 3X to 15X depending on if you got one or two copies of the responsible gene from your parents.

Takeaways: 

  • Alzheimer's (henceforth Alz) happens because of the formation of plaques, the constitution of which includes "Beta-Amyloid Proteins" that accumulate in meatball structures in your neurons, iron, and copper
  • Saturated fats are horrible, especially the kind that solidifies at temperature (Bacon grease). 
    • Dairy products are the highest source of Saturated fats (2nd is meat) 
    • People who ate double the amount of bad fat, their risk of developing Alz is 3X higher
    • Similar finding for mild cognitive impairment (high functioning, but forget names and words) and they found the same pattern as Alz
  • Iron and copper is an important part of our body, but:
    • Iron is a double edges sword, too much is bad
    • If you are using a cast-iron pan, then you are getting iron into your diet. Same with water that transports from copper pipes. The free agents and ions travel into your body and get assimilated into your body
    • Vitamin E (mangos, spinach, avocado) is a natural extinguisher - knocks out the free radicals
    • Cannot get from a store, because there's many forms in nature. If you ingest artificial supplements your body only absorbs that version and shuts off the absorption of all others. Hence get it from food, nature intended that way
    • Don't eat nuts as snack food, crumble and use in salad
  • Colorful foods are awesome, very rich in antioxidants. eg: Blueberry, grapes. carrots, apples 
  • Staples - fruits, legumes, grains and vegetables
  • Exercise helps all bodily functions, memory benefits from it too (even something as simple as a 10 minute week)
  • Genes are not destiny

The dying art of conversation and how to revive it

https://podcast.app/celeste-headlee-the-dying-art-of-conversation-e50721834/?utm_source=ios&utm_medium=share

Takeaways / Observations / Musings:

  • Opera singers are trained listeners, they have to keep track of their own instrument, the conductor, the ebb and flow of the bass and the changing meter. It is hard because listening doesn't come naturally to humans, we evolved as babies to scream for help and we carry that through adulthood
  • types of listening
    • Evaluative - evaluate whether the person is right or wrong 
    • Interpretive - 
    • Transformative - when you learn and transform your own audience 
  • Conversation is almost universally neurologically beneficial. Only two situations where it isn't:
    • when we detect a negative or hostile tone
    • unsolicited advice - even if we walk away having learned something, we do not like unsolicited advice 
  • In written form - don't use 'that', keep ideas simple and brief
  • conversational narcissism - when we insert ourselves into the conversation
    • somebody says their dog died and you say "I know exactly how you feel' is the worst thing you could have said (even if your dog actually die). At the end of this conversation you end up happy because you spoke about yourself, the other person does NOT
    • another way out is to withhold attention - if you do, inadvertently the person will ask you for your experience 
  • An interview is a conversation moderated by the interviewer with a time limit 
  • in an interview nobody cares how smart the interviewer is, the listener is here to hear the interviewee speak and the interviewer to ask the questions that facilitate the conversation 
  • Yes, and - Improv is a great tool to learn conversation 

The Hamming Problems (copied)

I got introduced to 'The Hamming Problem' through Twitter, then books (and audiobooks), and so on. Sam Altman was the first to formally explain the nomenclature and share the source of his inspiration. This is a crossposting from his excellent blog post.

Richard Hamming gave this talk in March of 1986. [1]  It's one of the best talks I've ever read and has long impacted how I think about spending my time.

I mentioned it to a number of people this weekend who, to my surprise, had never heard of it.  So I thought I'd share it here:

It's a pleasure to be here. I doubt if I can live up to the Introduction. The title of my talk is, ``You and Your Research.'' It is not about managing research, it is about how you individually do your research. I could give a talk on the other subject - but it's not, it's about you. I'm not talking about ordinary run-of-the-mill research; I'm talking about great research. And for the sake of describing great research I'll occasionally say Nobel-Prize type of work. It doesn't have to gain the Nobel Prize, but I mean those kinds of things which we perceive are significant things. Relativity, if you want, Shannon's information theory, any number of outstanding theories - that's the kind of thing I'm talking about.

Now, how did I come to do this study? At Los Alamos I was brought in to run the computing machines which other people had got going, so those scientists and physicists could get back to business. I saw I was a stooge. I saw that although physically I was the same, they were different. And to put the thing bluntly, I was envious. I wanted to know why they were so different from me. I saw Feynman up close. I saw Fermi and Teller. I saw Oppenheimer. I saw Hans Bethe: he was my boss. I saw quite a few very capable people. I became very interested in the difference between those who do and those who might have done.

When I came to Bell Labs, I came into a very productive department. Bode was the department head at the time; Shannon was there, and there were other people. I continued examining the questions, ``Why?'' and ``What is the difference?'' I continued subsequently by reading biographies, autobiographies, asking people questions such as: ``How did you come to do this?'' I tried to find out what are the differences. And that's what this talk is about.

Now, why is this talk important? I think it is important because, as far as I know, each of you has one life to live. Even if you believe in reincarnation it doesn't do you any good from one life to the next! Why shouldn't you do significant things in this one life, however you define significant? I'm not going to define it - you know what I mean. I will talk mainly about science because that is what I have studied. But so far as I know, and I've been told by others, much of what I say applies to many fields. Outstanding work is characterized very much the same way in most fields, but I will confine myself to science.

In order to get at you individually, I must talk in the first person. I have to get you to drop modesty and say to yourself, ``Yes, I would like to do first-class work.'' Our society frowns on people who set out to do really good work. You're not supposed to; luck is supposed to descend on you and you do great things by chance. Well, that's a kind of dumb thing to say. I say, why shouldn't you set out to do something significant. You don't have to tell other people, but shouldn't you say to yourself, ``Yes, I would like to do something significant.''

In order to get to the second stage, I have to drop modesty and talk in the first person about what I've seen, what I've done, and what I've heard. I'm going to talk about people, some of whom you know, and I trust that when we leave, you won't quote me as saying some of the things I said.

Let me start not logically, but psychologically. I find that the major objection is that people think great science is done by luck. It's all a matter of luck. Well, consider Einstein. Note how many different things he did that were good. Was it all luck? Wasn't it a little too repetitive? Consider Shannon. He didn't do just information theory. Several years before, he did some other good things and some which are still locked up in the security of cryptography. He did many good things.

You see again and again, that it is more than one thing from a good person. Once in a while a person does only one thing in his whole life, and we'll talk about that later, but a lot of times there is repetition. I claim that luck will not cover everything. And I will cite Pasteur who said, ``Luck favors the prepared mind.'' And I think that says it the way I believe it. There is indeed an element of luck, and no, there isn't. The prepared mind sooner or later finds something important and does it. So yes, it is luck. The particular thing you do is luck, but that you do something is not.

For example, when I came to Bell Labs, I shared an office for a while with Shannon. At the same time he was doing information theory, I was doing coding theory. It is suspicious that the two of us did it at the same place and at the same time - it was in the atmosphere. And you can say, ``Yes, it was luck.'' On the other hand you can say, ``But why of all the people in Bell Labs then were those the two who did it?'' Yes, it is partly luck, and partly it is the prepared mind; but `partly' is the other thing I'm going to talk about. So, although I'll come back several more times to luck, I want to dispose of this matter of luck as being the sole criterion whether you do great work or not. I claim you have some, but not total, control over it. And I will quote, finally, Newton on the matter. Newton said, ``If others would think as hard as I did, then they would get similar results.''

One of the characteristics you see, and many people have it including great scientists, is that usually when they were young they had independent thoughts and had the courage to pursue them. For example, Einstein, somewhere around 12 or 14, asked himself the question, ``What would a light wave look like if I went with the velocity of light to look at it?'' Now he knew that electromagnetic theory says you cannot have a stationary local maximum. But if he moved along with the velocity of light, he would see a local maximum. He could see a contradiction at the age of 12, 14, or somewhere around there, that everything was not right and that the velocity of light had something peculiar. Is it luck that he finally created special relativity? Early on, he had laid down some of the pieces by thinking of the fragments. Now that's the necessary but not sufficient condition. All of these items I will talk about are both luck and not luck.

How about having lots of `brains?' It sounds good. Most of you in this room probably have more than enough brains to do first-class work. But great work is something else than mere brains. Brains are measured in various ways. In mathematics, theoretical physics, astrophysics, typically brains correlates to a great extent with the ability to manipulate symbols. And so the typical IQ test is apt to score them fairly high. On the other hand, in other fields it is something different. For example, Bill Pfann, the fellow who did zone melting, came into my office one day. He had this idea dimly in his mind about what he wanted and he had some equations. It was pretty clear to me that this man didn't know much mathematics and he wasn't really articulate. His problem seemed interesting so I took it home and did a little work. I finally showed him how to run computers so he could compute his own answers. I gave him the power to compute. He went ahead, with negligible recognition from his own department, but ultimately he has collected all the prizes in the field. Once he got well started, his shyness, his awkwardness, his inarticulateness, fell away and he became much more productive in many other ways. Certainly he became much more articulate.

And I can cite another person in the same way. I trust he isn't in the audience, i.e. a fellow named Clogston. I met him when I was working on a problem with John Pierce's group and I didn't think he had much. I asked my friends who had been with him at school, ``Was he like that in graduate school?'' ``Yes,'' they replied. Well I would have fired the fellow, but J. R. Pierce was smart and kept him on. Clogston finally did the Clogston cable. After that there was a steady stream of good ideas. One success brought him confidence and courage.

One of the characteristics of successful scientists is having courage. Once you get your courage up and believe that you can do important problems, then you can. If you think you can't, almost surely you are not going to. Courage is one of the things that Shannon had supremely. You have only to think of his major theorem. He wants to create a method of coding, but he doesn't know what to do so he makes a random code. Then he is stuck. And then he asks the impossible question, ``What would the average random code do?'' He then proves that the average code is arbitrarily good, and that therefore there must be at least one good code. Who but a man of infinite courage could have dared to think those thoughts? That is the characteristic of great scientists; they have courage. They will go forward under incredible circumstances; they think and continue to think.

Age is another factor which the physicists particularly worry about. They always are saying that you have got to do it when you are young or you will never do it. Einstein did things very early, and all the quantum mechanic fellows were disgustingly young when they did their best work. Most mathematicians, theoretical physicists, and astrophysicists do what we consider their best work when they are young. It is not that they don't do good work in their old age but what we value most is often what they did early. On the other hand, in music, politics and literature, often what we consider their best work was done late. I don't know how whatever field you are in fits this scale, but age has some effect.

But let me say why age seems to have the effect it does. In the first place if you do some good work you will find yourself on all kinds of committees and unable to do any more work. You may find yourself as I saw Brattain when he got a Nobel Prize. The day the prize was announced we all assembled in Arnold Auditorium; all three winners got up and made speeches. The third one, Brattain, practically with tears in his eyes, said, ``I know about this Nobel-Prize effect and I am not going to let it affect me; I am going to remain good old Walter Brattain.'' Well I said to myself, ``That is nice.'' But in a few weeks I saw it was affecting him. Now he could only work on great problems.

When you are famous it is hard to work on small problems. This is what did Shannon in. After information theory, what do you do for an encore? The great scientists often make this error. They fail to continue to plant the little acorns from which the mighty oak trees grow. They try to get the big thing right off. And that isn't the way things go. So that is another reason why you find that when you get early recognition it seems to sterilize you. In fact I will give you my favorite quotation of many years. The Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, in my opinion, has ruined more good scientists than any institution has created, judged by what they did before they came and judged by what they did after. Not that they weren't good afterwards, but they were superb before they got there and were only good afterwards.

This brings up the subject, out of order perhaps, of working conditions. What most people think are the best working conditions, are not. Very clearly they are not because people are often most productive when working conditions are bad. One of the better times of the Cambridge Physical Laboratories was when they had practically shacks - they did some of the best physics ever.

I give you a story from my own private life. Early on it became evident to me that Bell Laboratories was not going to give me the conventional acre of programming people to program computing machines in absolute binary. It was clear they weren't going to. But that was the way everybody did it. I could go to the West Coast and get a job with the airplane companies without any trouble, but the exciting people were at Bell Labs and the fellows out there in the airplane companies were not. I thought for a long while about, ``Did I want to go or not?'' and I wondered how I could get the best of two possible worlds. I finally said to myself, ``Hamming, you think the machines can do practically everything. Why can't you make them write programs?'' What appeared at first to me as a defect forced me into automatic programming very early. What appears to be a fault, often, by a change of viewpoint, turns out to be one of the greatest assets you can have. But you are not likely to think that when you first look the thing and say, ``Gee, I'm never going to get enough programmers, so how can I ever do any great programming?''

And there are many other stories of the same kind; Grace Hopper has similar ones. I think that if you look carefully you will see that often the great scientists, by turning the problem around a bit, changed a defect to an asset. For example, many scientists when they found they couldn't do a problem finally began to study why not. They then turned it around the other way and said, ``But of course, this is what it is'' and got an important result. So ideal working conditions are very strange. The ones you want aren't always the best ones for you.

Now for the matter of drive. You observe that most great scientists have tremendous drive. I worked for ten years with John Tukey at Bell Labs. He had tremendous drive. One day about three or four years after I joined, I discovered that John Tukey was slightly younger than I was. John was a genius and I clearly was not. Well I went storming into Bode's office and said, ``How can anybody my age know as much as John Tukey does?'' He leaned back in his chair, put his hands behind his head, grinned slightly, and said, ``You would be surprised Hamming, how much you would know if you worked as hard as he did that many years.'' I simply slunk out of the office!

What Bode was saying was this: ``Knowledge and productivity are like compound interest.'' Given two people of approximately the same ability and one person who works ten percent more than the other, the latter will more than twice outproduce the former. The more you know, the more you learn; the more you learn, the more you can do; the more you can do, the more the opportunity - it is very much like compound interest. I don't want to give you a rate, but it is a very high rate. Given two people with exactly the same ability, the one person who manages day in and day out to get in one more hour of thinking will be tremendously more productive over a lifetime. I took Bode's remark to heart; I spent a good deal more of my time for some years trying to work a bit harder and I found, in fact, I could get more work done. I don't like to say it in front of my wife, but I did sort of neglect her sometimes; I needed to study. You have to neglect things if you intend to get what you want done. There's no question about this.

On this matter of drive Edison says, ``Genius is 99% perspiration and 1% inspiration.'' He may have been exaggerating, but the idea is that solid work, steadily applied, gets you surprisingly far. The steady application of effort with a little bit more work, intelligently applied is what does it. That's the trouble; drive, misapplied, doesn't get you anywhere. I've often wondered why so many of my good friends at Bell Labs who worked as hard or harder than I did, didn't have so much to show for it. The misapplication of effort is a very serious matter. Just hard work is not enough - it must be applied sensibly.

There's another trait on the side which I want to talk about; that trait is ambiguity. It took me a while to discover its importance. Most people like to believe something is or is not true. Great scientists tolerate ambiguity very well. They believe the theory enough to go ahead; they doubt it enough to notice the errors and faults so they can step forward and create the new replacement theory. If you believe too much you'll never notice the flaws; if you doubt too much you won't get started. It requires a lovely balance. But most great scientists are well aware of why their theories are true and they are also well aware of some slight misfits which don't quite fit and they don't forget it. Darwin writes in his autobiography that he found it necessary to write down every piece of evidence which appeared to contradict his beliefs because otherwise they would disappear from his mind. When you find apparent flaws you've got to be sensitive and keep track of those things, and keep an eye out for how they can be explained or how the theory can be changed to fit them. Those are often the great contributions. Great contributions are rarely done by adding another decimal place. It comes down to an emotional commitment. Most great scientists are completely committed to their problem. Those who don't become committed seldom produce outstanding, first-class work.

Now again, emotional commitment is not enough. It is a necessary condition apparently. And I think I can tell you the reason why. Everybody who has studied creativity is driven finally to saying, ``creativity comes out of your subconscious.'' Somehow, suddenly, there it is. It just appears. Well, we know very little about the subconscious; but one thing you are pretty well aware of is that your dreams also come out of your subconscious. And you're aware your dreams are, to a fair extent, a reworking of the experiences of the day. If you are deeply immersed and committed to a topic, day after day after day, your subconscious has nothing to do but work on your problem. And so you wake up one morning, or on some afternoon, and there's the answer. For those who don't get committed to their current problem, the subconscious goofs off on other things and doesn't produce the big result. So the way to manage yourself is that when you have a real important problem you don't let anything else get the center of your attention - you keep your thoughts on the problem. Keep your subconscious starved so it has to work on your problem, so you can sleep peacefully and get the answer in the morning, free.

Now Alan Chynoweth mentioned that I used to eat at the physics table. I had been eating with the mathematicians and I found out that I already knew a fair amount of mathematics; in fact, I wasn't learning much. The physics table was, as he said, an exciting place, but I think he exaggerated on how much I contributed. It was very interesting to listen to Shockley, Brattain, Bardeen, J. B. Johnson, Ken McKay and other people, and I was learning a lot. But unfortunately a Nobel Prize came, and a promotion came, and what was left was the dregs. Nobody wanted what was left. Well, there was no use eating with them!

Over on the other side of the dining hall was a chemistry table. I had worked with one of the fellows, Dave McCall; furthermore he was courting our secretary at the time. I went over and said, ``Do you mind if I join you?'' They can't say no, so I started eating with them for a while. And I started asking, ``What are the important problems of your field?'' And after a week or so, ``What important problems are you working on?'' And after some more time I came in one day and said, ``If what you are doing is not important, and if you don't think it is going to lead to something important, why are you at Bell Labs working on it?'' I wasn't welcomed after that; I had to find somebody else to eat with! That was in the spring.

In the fall, Dave McCall stopped me in the hall and said, ``Hamming, that remark of yours got underneath my skin. I thought about it all summer, i.e. what were the important problems in my field. I haven't changed my research,'' he says, ``but I think it was well worthwhile.'' And I said, ``Thank you Dave,'' and went on. I noticed a couple of months later he was made the head of the department. I noticed the other day he was a Member of the National Academy of Engineering. I noticed he has succeeded. I have never heard the names of any of the other fellows at that table mentioned in science and scientific circles. They were unable to ask themselves, ``What are the important problems in my field?''

If you do not work on an important problem, it's unlikely you'll do important work. It's perfectly obvious. Great scientists have thought through, in a careful way, a number of important problems in their field, and they keep an eye on wondering how to attack them. Let me warn you, `important problem' must be phrased carefully. The three outstanding problems in physics, in a certain sense, were never worked on while I was at Bell Labs. By important I mean guaranteed a Nobel Prize and any sum of money you want to mention. We didn't work on (1) time travel, (2) teleportation, and (3) antigravity. They are not important problems because we do not have an attack. It's not the consequence that makes a problem important, it is that you have a reasonable attack. That is what makes a problem important. When I say that most scientists don't work on important problems, I mean it in that sense. The average scientist, so far as I can make out, spends almost all his time working on problems which he believes will not be important and he also doesn't believe that they will lead to important problems.

I spoke earlier about planting acorns so that oaks will grow. You can't always know exactly where to be, but you can keep active in places where something might happen. And even if you believe that great science is a matter of luck, you can stand on a mountain top where lightning strikes; you don't have to hide in the valley where you're safe. But the average scientist does routine safe work almost all the time and so he (or she) doesn't produce much. It's that simple. If you want to do great work, you clearly must work on important problems, and you should have an idea.

Along those lines at some urging from John Tukey and others, I finally adopted what I called ``Great Thoughts Time.'' When I went to lunch Friday noon, I would only discuss great thoughts after that. By great thoughts I mean ones like: ``What will be the role of computers in all of AT&T?'', ``How will computers change science?'' For example, I came up with the observation at that time that nine out of ten experiments were done in the lab and one in ten on the computer. I made a remark to the vice presidents one time, that it would be reversed, i.e. nine out of ten experiments would be done on the computer and one in ten in the lab. They knew I was a crazy mathematician and had no sense of reality. I knew they were wrong and they've been proved wrong while I have been proved right. They built laboratories when they didn't need them. I saw that computers were transforming science because I spent a lot of time asking ``What will be the impact of computers on science and how can I change it?'' I asked myself, ``How is it going to change Bell Labs?'' I remarked one time, in the same address, that more than one-half of the people at Bell Labs will be interacting closely with computing machines before I leave. Well, you all have terminals now. I thought hard about where was my field going, where were the opportunities, and what were the important things to do. Let me go there so there is a chance I can do important things.

Most great scientists know many important problems. They have something between 10 and 20 important problems for which they are looking for an attack. And when they see a new idea come up, one hears them say ``Well that bears on this problem.'' They drop all the other things and get after it. Now I can tell you a horror story that was told to me but I can't vouch for the truth of it. I was sitting in an airport talking to a friend of mine from Los Alamos about how it was lucky that the fission experiment occurred over in Europe when it did because that got us working on the atomic bomb here in the US. He said ``No; at Berkeley we had gathered a bunch of data; we didn't get around to reducing it because we were building some more equipment, but if we had reduced that data we would have found fission.'' They had it in their hands and they didn't pursue it. They came in second!

The great scientists, when an opportunity opens up, get after it and they pursue it. They drop all other things. They get rid of other things and they get after an idea because they had already thought the thing through. Their minds are prepared; they see the opportunity and they go after it. Now of course lots of times it doesn't work out, but you don't have to hit many of them to do some great science. It's kind of easy. One of the chief tricks is to live a long time!

Another trait, it took me a while to notice. I noticed the following facts about people who work with the door open or the door closed. I notice that if you have the door to your office closed, you get more work done today and tomorrow, and you are more productive than most. But 10 years later somehow you don't know quite know what problems are worth working on; all the hard work you do is sort of tangential in importance. He who works with the door open gets all kinds of interruptions, but he also occasionally gets clues as to what the world is and what might be important. Now I cannot prove the cause and effect sequence because you might say, ``The closed door is symbolic of a closed mind.'' I don't know. But I can say there is a pretty good correlation between those who work with the doors open and those who ultimately do important things, although people who work with doors closed often work harder. Somehow they seem to work on slightly the wrong thing - not much, but enough that they miss fame.

I want to talk on another topic. It is based on the song which I think many of you know, ``It ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it.'' I'll start with an example of my own. I was conned into doing on a digital computer, in the absolute binary days, a problem which the best analog computers couldn't do. And I was getting an answer. When I thought carefully and said to myself, ``You know, Hamming, you're going to have to file a report on this military job; after you spend a lot of money you're going to have to account for it and every analog installation is going to want the report to see if they can't find flaws in it.'' I was doing the required integration by a rather crummy method, to say the least, but I was getting the answer. And I realized that in truth the problem was not just to get the answer; it was to demonstrate for the first time, and beyond question, that I could beat the analog computer on its own ground with a digital machine. I reworked the method of solution, created a theory which was nice and elegant, and changed the way we computed the answer; the results were no different. The published report had an elegant method which was later known for years as ``Hamming's Method of Integrating Differential Equations.'' It is somewhat obsolete now, but for a while it was a very good method. By changing the problem slightly, I did important work rather than trivial work.

In the same way, when using the machine up in the attic in the early days, I was solving one problem after another after another; a fair number were successful and there were a few failures. I went home one Friday after finishing a problem, and curiously enough I wasn't happy; I was depressed. I could see life being a long sequence of one problem after another after another. After quite a while of thinking I decided, ``No, I should be in the mass production of a variable product. I should be concerned with all of next year's problems, not just the one in front of my face.'' By changing the question I still got the same kind of results or better, but I changed things and did important work. I attacked the major problem - How do I conquer machines and do all of next year's problems when I don't know what they are going to be? How do I prepare for it? How do I do this one so I'll be on top of it? How do I obey Newton's rule? He said, ``If I have seen further than others, it is because I've stood on the shoulders of giants.'' These days we stand on each other's feet!

You should do your job in such a fashion that others can build on top of it, so they will indeed say, ``Yes, I've stood on so and so's shoulders and I saw further.'' The essence of science is cumulative. By changing a problem slightly you can often do great work rather than merely good work. Instead of attacking isolated problems, I made the resolution that I would never again solve an isolated problem except as characteristic of a class.

Now if you are much of a mathematician you know that the effort to generalize often means that the solution is simple. Often by stopping and saying, ``This is the problem he wants but this is characteristic of so and so. Yes, I can attack the whole class with a far superior method than the particular one because I was earlier embedded in needless detail.'' The business of abstraction frequently makes things simple. Furthermore, I filed away the methods and prepared for the future problems.

To end this part, I'll remind you, ``It is a poor workman who blames his tools - the good man gets on with the job, given what he's got, and gets the best answer he can.'' And I suggest that by altering the problem, by looking at the thing differently, you can make a great deal of difference in your final productivity because you can either do it in such a fashion that people can indeed build on what you've done, or you can do it in such a fashion that the next person has to essentially duplicate again what you've done. It isn't just a matter of the job, it's the way you write the report, the way you write the paper, the whole attitude. It's just as easy to do a broad, general job as one very special case. And it's much more satisfying and rewarding!

I have now come down to a topic which is very distasteful; it is not sufficient to do a job, you have to sell it. `Selling' to a scientist is an awkward thing to do. It's very ugly; you shouldn't have to do it. The world is supposed to be waiting, and when you do something great, they should rush out and welcome it. But the fact is everyone is busy with their own work. You must present it so well that they will set aside what they are doing, look at what you've done, read it, and come back and say, ``Yes, that was good.'' I suggest that when you open a journal, as you turn the pages, you ask why you read some articles and not others. You had better write your report so when it is published in the Physical Review, or wherever else you want it, as the readers are turning the pages they won't just turn your pages but they will stop and read yours. If they don't stop and read it, you won't get credit.

There are three things you have to do in selling. You have to learn to write clearly and well so that people will read it, you must learn to give reasonably formal talks, and you also must learn to give informal talks. We had a lot of so-called `back room scientists.' In a conference, they would keep quiet. Three weeks later after a decision was made they filed a report saying why you should do so and so. Well, it was too late. They would not stand up right in the middle of a hot conference, in the middle of activity, and say, ``We should do this for these reasons.'' You need to master that form of communication as well as prepared speeches.

When I first started, I got practically physically ill while giving a speech, and I was very, very nervous. I realized I either had to learn to give speeches smoothly or I would essentially partially cripple my whole career. The first time IBM asked me to give a speech in New York one evening, I decided I was going to give a really good speech, a speech that was wanted, not a technical one but a broad one, and at the end if they liked it, I'd quietly say, ``Any time you want one I'll come in and give you one.'' As a result, I got a great deal of practice giving speeches to a limited audience and I got over being afraid. Furthermore, I could also then study what methods were effective and what were ineffective.

While going to meetings I had already been studying why some papers are remembered and most are not. The technical person wants to give a highly limited technical talk. Most of the time the audience wants a broad general talk and wants much more survey and background than the speaker is willing to give. As a result, many talks are ineffective. The speaker names a topic and suddenly plunges into the details he's solved. Few people in the audience may follow. You should paint a general picture to say why it's important, and then slowly give a sketch of what was done. Then a larger number of people will say, ``Yes, Joe has done that,'' or ``Mary has done that; I really see where it is; yes, Mary really gave a good talk; I understand what Mary has done.'' The tendency is to give a highly restricted, safe talk; this is usually ineffective. Furthermore, many talks are filled with far too much information. So I say this idea of selling is obvious.

Let me summarize. You've got to work on important problems. I deny that it is all luck, but I admit there is a fair element of luck. I subscribe to Pasteur's ``Luck favors the prepared mind.'' I favor heavily what I did. Friday afternoons for years - great thoughts only - means that I committed 10% of my time trying to understand the bigger problems in the field, i.e. what was and what was not important. I found in the early days I had believed `this' and yet had spent all week marching in `that' direction. It was kind of foolish. If I really believe the action is over there, why do I march in this direction? I either had to change my goal or change what I did. So I changed something I did and I marched in the direction I thought was important. It's that easy.

Now you might tell me you haven't got control over what you have to work on. Well, when you first begin, you may not. But once you're moderately successful, there are more people asking for results than you can deliver and you have some power of choice, but not completely. I'll tell you a story about that, and it bears on the subject of educating your boss. I had a boss named Schelkunoff; he was, and still is, a very good friend of mine. Some military person came to me and demanded some answers by Friday. Well, I had already dedicated my computing resources to reducing data on the fly for a group of scientists; I was knee deep in short, small, important problems. This military person wanted me to solve his problem by the end of the day on Friday. I said, ``No, I'll give it to you Monday. I can work on it over the weekend. I'm not going to do it now.'' He goes down to my boss, Schelkunoff, and Schelkunoff says, ``You must run this for him; he's got to have it by Friday.'' I tell him, ``Why do I?''; he says, ``You have to.'' I said, ``Fine, Sergei, but you're sitting in your office Friday afternoon catching the late bus home to watch as this fellow walks out that door.'' I gave the military person the answers late Friday afternoon. I then went to Schelkunoff's office and sat down; as the man goes out I say, ``You see Schelkunoff, this fellow has nothing under his arm; but I gave him the answers.'' On Monday morning Schelkunoff called him up and said, ``Did you come in to work over the weekend?'' I could hear, as it were, a pause as the fellow ran through his mind of what was going to happen; but he knew he would have had to sign in, and he'd better not say he had when he hadn't, so he said he hadn't. Ever after that Schelkunoff said, ``You set your deadlines; you can change them.''

One lesson was sufficient to educate my boss as to why I didn't want to do big jobs that displaced exploratory research and why I was justified in not doing crash jobs which absorb all the research computing facilities. I wanted instead to use the facilities to compute a large number of small problems. Again, in the early days, I was limited in computing capacity and it was clear, in my area, that a ``mathematician had no use for machines.'' But I needed more machine capacity. Every time I had to tell some scientist in some other area, ``No I can't; I haven't the machine capacity,'' he complained. I said ``Go tell your Vice President that Hamming needs more computing capacity.'' After a while I could see what was happening up there at the top; many people said to my Vice President, ``Your man needs more computing capacity.'' I got it!

I also did a second thing. When I loaned what little programming power we had to help in the early days of computing, I said, ``We are not getting the recognition for our programmers that they deserve. When you publish a paper you will thank that programmer or you aren't getting any more help from me. That programmer is going to be thanked by name; she's worked hard.'' I waited a couple of years. I then went through a year of BSTJ articles and counted what fraction thanked some programmer. I took it into the boss and said, ``That's the central role computing is playing in Bell Labs; if the BSTJ is important, that's how important computing is.'' He had to give in. You can educate your bosses. It's a hard job. In this talk I'm only viewing from the bottom up; I'm not viewing from the top down. But I am telling you how you can get what you want in spite of top management. You have to sell your ideas there also.

Well I now come down to the topic, ``Is the effort to be a great scientist worth it?'' To answer this, you must ask people. When you get beyond their modesty, most people will say, ``Yes, doing really first-class work, and knowing it, is as good as wine, women and song put together,'' or if it's a woman she says, ``It is as good as wine, men and song put together.'' And if you look at the bosses, they tend to come back or ask for reports, trying to participate in those moments of discovery. They're always in the way. So evidently those who have done it, want to do it again. But it is a limited survey. I have never dared to go out and ask those who didn't do great work how they felt about the matter. It's a biased sample, but I still think it is worth the struggle. I think it is very definitely worth the struggle to try and do first-class work because the truth is, the value is in the struggle more than it is in the result. The struggle to make something of yourself seems to be worthwhile in itself. The success and fame are sort of dividends, in my opinion.

I've told you how to do it. It is so easy, so why do so many people, with all their talents, fail? For example, my opinion, to this day, is that there are in the mathematics department at Bell Labs quite a few people far more able and far better endowed than I, but they didn't produce as much. Some of them did produce more than I did; Shannon produced more than I did, and some others produced a lot, but I was highly productive against a lot of other fellows who were better equipped. Why is it so? What happened to them? Why do so many of the people who have great promise, fail?

Well, one of the reasons is drive and commitment. The people who do great work with less ability but who are committed to it, get more done that those who have great skill and dabble in it, who work during the day and go home and do other things and come back and work the next day. They don't have the deep commitment that is apparently necessary for really first-class work. They turn out lots of good work, but we were talking, remember, about first-class work. There is a difference. Good people, very talented people, almost always turn out good work. We're talking about the outstanding work, the type of work that gets the Nobel Prize and gets recognition.

The second thing is, I think, the problem of personality defects. Now I'll cite a fellow whom I met out in Irvine. He had been the head of a computing center and he was temporarily on assignment as a special assistant to the president of the university. It was obvious he had a job with a great future. He took me into his office one time and showed me his method of getting letters done and how he took care of his correspondence. He pointed out how inefficient the secretary was. He kept all his letters stacked around there; he knew where everything was. And he would, on his word processor, get the letter out. He was bragging how marvelous it was and how he could get so much more work done without the secretary's interference. Well, behind his back, I talked to the secretary. The secretary said, ``Of course I can't help him; I don't get his mail. He won't give me the stuff to log in; I don't know where he puts it on the floor. Of course I can't help him.'' So I went to him and said, ``Look, if you adopt the present method and do what you can do single-handedly, you can go just that far and no farther than you can do single-handedly. If you will learn to work with the system, you can go as far as the system will support you.'' And, he never went any further. He had his personality defect of wanting total control and was not willing to recognize that you need the support of the system.

You find this happening again and again; good scientists will fight the system rather than learn to work with the system and take advantage of all the system has to offer. It has a lot, if you learn how to use it. It takes patience, but you can learn how to use the system pretty well, and you can learn how to get around it. After all, if you want a decision `No', you just go to your boss and get a `No' easy. If you want to do something, don't ask, do it. Present him with an accomplished fact. Don't give him a chance to tell you `No'. But if you want a `No', it's easy to get a `No'.

Another personality defect is ego assertion and I'll speak in this case of my own experience. I came from Los Alamos and in the early days I was using a machine in New York at 590 Madison Avenue where we merely rented time. I was still dressing in western clothes, big slash pockets, a bolo and all those things. I vaguely noticed that I was not getting as good service as other people. So I set out to measure. You came in and you waited for your turn; I felt I was not getting a fair deal. I said to myself, ``Why? No Vice President at IBM said, `Give Hamming a bad time'. It is the secretaries at the bottom who are doing this. When a slot appears, they'll rush to find someone to slip in, but they go out and find somebody else. Now, why? I haven't mistreated them.'' Answer, I wasn't dressing the way they felt somebody in that situation should. It came down to just that - I wasn't dressing properly. I had to make the decision - was I going to assert my ego and dress the way I wanted to and have it steadily drain my effort from my professional life, or was I going to appear to conform better? I decided I would make an effort to appear to conform properly. The moment I did, I got much better service. And now, as an old colorful character, I get better service than other people.

You should dress according to the expectations of the audience spoken to. If I am going to give an address at the MIT computer center, I dress with a bolo and an old corduroy jacket or something else. I know enough not to let my clothes, my appearance, my manners get in the way of what I care about. An enormous number of scientists feel they must assert their ego and do their thing their way. They have got to be able to do this, that, or the other thing, and they pay a steady price.

John Tukey almost always dressed very casually. He would go into an important office and it would take a long time before the other fellow realized that this is a first-class man and he had better listen. For a long time John has had to overcome this kind of hostility. It's wasted effort! I didn't say you should conform; I said ``The appearance of conforming gets you a long way.'' If you chose to assert your ego in any number of ways, ``I am going to do it my way,'' you pay a small steady price throughout the whole of your professional career. And this, over a whole lifetime, adds up to an enormous amount of needless trouble.

By taking the trouble to tell jokes to the secretaries and being a little friendly, I got superb secretarial help. For instance, one time for some idiot reason all the reproducing services at Murray Hill were tied up. Don't ask me how, but they were. I wanted something done. My secretary called up somebody at Holmdel, hopped the company car, made the hour-long trip down and got it reproduced, and then came back. It was a payoff for the times I had made an effort to cheer her up, tell her jokes and be friendly; it was that little extra work that later paid off for me. By realizing you have to use the system and studying how to get the system to do your work, you learn how to adapt the system to your desires. Or you can fight it steadily, as a small undeclared war, for the whole of your life.

And I think John Tukey paid a terrible price needlessly. He was a genius anyhow, but I think it would have been far better, and far simpler, had he been willing to conform a little bit instead of ego asserting. He is going to dress the way he wants all of the time. It applies not only to dress but to a thousand other things; people will continue to fight the system. Not that you shouldn't occasionally!

When they moved the library from the middle of Murray Hill to the far end, a friend of mine put in a request for a bicycle. Well, the organization was not dumb. They waited awhile and sent back a map of the grounds saying, ``Will you please indicate on this map what paths you are going to take so we can get an insurance policy covering you.'' A few more weeks went by. They then asked, ``Where are you going to store the bicycle and how will it be locked so we can do so and so.'' He finally realized that of course he was going to be red-taped to death so he gave in. He rose to be the President of Bell Laboratories.

Barney Oliver was a good man. He wrote a letter one time to the IEEE. At that time the official shelf space at Bell Labs was so much and the height of the IEEE Proceedings at that time was larger; and since you couldn't change the size of the official shelf space he wrote this letter to the IEEE Publication person saying, ``Since so many IEEE members were at Bell Labs and since the official space was so high the journal size should be changed.'' He sent it for his boss's signature. Back came a carbon with his signature, but he still doesn't know whether the original was sent or not. I am not saying you shouldn't make gestures of reform. I am saying that my study of able people is that they don't get themselves committed to that kind of warfare. They play it a little bit and drop it and get on with their work.

Many a second-rate fellow gets caught up in some little twitting of the system, and carries it through to warfare. He expends his energy in a foolish project. Now you are going to tell me that somebody has to change the system. I agree; somebody's has to. Which do you want to be? The person who changes the system or the person who does first-class science? Which person is it that you want to be? Be clear, when you fight the system and struggle with it, what you are doing, how far to go out of amusement, and how much to waste your effort fighting the system. My advice is to let somebody else do it and you get on with becoming a first-class scientist. Very few of you have the ability to both reform the system and become a first-class scientist.

On the other hand, we can't always give in. There are times when a certain amount of rebellion is sensible. I have observed almost all scientists enjoy a certain amount of twitting the system for the sheer love of it. What it comes down to basically is that you cannot be original in one area without having originality in others. Originality is being different. You can't be an original scientist without having some other original characteristics. But many a scientist has let his quirks in other places make him pay a far higher price than is necessary for the ego satisfaction he or she gets. I'm not against all ego assertion; I'm against some.

Another fault is anger. Often a scientist becomes angry, and this is no way to handle things. Amusement, yes, anger, no. Anger is misdirected. You should follow and cooperate rather than struggle against the system all the time.

Another thing you should look for is the positive side of things instead of the negative. I have already given you several examples, and there are many, many more; how, given the situation, by changing the way I looked at it, I converted what was apparently a defect to an asset. I'll give you another example. I am an egotistical person; there is no doubt about it. I knew that most people who took a sabbatical to write a book, didn't finish it on time. So before I left, I told all my friends that when I come back, that book was going to be done! Yes, I would have it done - I'd have been ashamed to come back without it! I used my ego to make myself behave the way I wanted to. I bragged about something so I'd have to perform. I found out many times, like a cornered rat in a real trap, I was surprisingly capable. I have found that it paid to say, ``Oh yes, I'll get the answer for you Tuesday,'' not having any idea how to do it. By Sunday night I was really hard thinking on how I was going to deliver by Tuesday. I often put my pride on the line and sometimes I failed, but as I said, like a cornered rat I'm surprised how often I did a good job. I think you need to learn to use yourself. I think you need to know how to convert a situation from one view to another which would increase the chance of success.

Now self-delusion in humans is very, very common. There are enumerable ways of you changing a thing and kidding yourself and making it look some other way. When you ask, ``Why didn't you do such and such,'' the person has a thousand alibis. If you look at the history of science, usually these days there are 10 people right there ready, and we pay off for the person who is there first. The other nine fellows say, ``Well, I had the idea but I didn't do it and so on and so on.'' There are so many alibis. Why weren't you first? Why didn't you do it right? Don't try an alibi. Don't try and kid yourself. You can tell other people all the alibis you want. I don't mind. But to yourself try to be honest.

If you really want to be a first-class scientist you need to know yourself, your weaknesses, your strengths, and your bad faults, like my egotism. How can you convert a fault to an asset? How can you convert a situation where you haven't got enough manpower to move into a direction when that's exactly what you need to do? I say again that I have seen, as I studied the history, the successful scientist changed the viewpoint and what was a defect became an asset.

In summary, I claim that some of the reasons why so many people who have greatness within their grasp don't succeed are: they don't work on important problems, they don't become emotionally involved, they don't try and change what is difficult to some other situation which is easily done but is still important, and they keep giving themselves alibis why they don't. They keep saying that it is a matter of luck. I've told you how easy it is; furthermore I've told you how to reform. Therefore, go forth and become great scientists!

DISCUSSION - QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

A. G. Chynoweth: Well that was 50 minutes of concentrated wisdom and observations accumulated over a fantastic career; I lost track of all the observations that were striking home. Some of them are very very timely. One was the plea for more computer capacity; I was hearing nothing but that this morning from several people, over and over again. So that was right on the mark today even though here we are 20 - 30 years after when you were making similar remarks, Dick. I can think of all sorts of lessons that all of us can draw from your talk. And for one, as I walk around the halls in the future I hope I won't see as many closed doors in Bellcore. That was one observation I thought was very intriguing.

Thank you very, very much indeed Dick; that was a wonderful recollection. I'll now open it up for questions. I'm sure there are many people who would like to take up on some of the points that Dick was making.

Hamming: First let me respond to Alan Chynoweth about computing. I had computing in research and for 10 years I kept telling my management, ``Get that !&@#% machine out of research. We are being forced to run problems all the time. We can't do research because were too busy operating and running the computing machines.'' Finally the message got through. They were going to move computing out of research to someplace else. I was persona non grata to say the least and I was surprised that people didn't kick my shins because everybody was having their toy taken away from them. I went in to Ed David's office and said, ``Look Ed, you've got to give your researchers a machine. If you give them a great big machine, we'll be back in the same trouble we were before, so busy keeping it going we can't think. Give them the smallest machine you can because they are very able people. They will learn how to do things on a small machine instead of mass computing.'' As far as I'm concerned, that's how UNIX arose. We gave them a moderately small machine and they decided to make it do great things. They had to come up with a system to do it on. It is called UNIX!

A. G. Chynoweth: I just have to pick up on that one. In our present environment, Dick, while we wrestle with some of the red tape attributed to, or required by, the regulators, there is one quote that one exasperated AVP came up with and I've used it over and over again. He growled that, ``UNIX was never a deliverable!''

Question: What about personal stress? Does that seem to make a difference?

Hamming: Yes, it does. If you don't get emotionally involved, it doesn't. I had incipient ulcers most of the years that I was at Bell Labs. I have since gone off to the Naval Postgraduate School and laid back somewhat, and now my health is much better. But if you want to be a great scientist you're going to have to put up with stress. You can lead a nice life; you can be a nice guy or you can be a great scientist. But nice guys end last, is what Leo Durocher said. If you want to lead a nice happy life with a lot of recreation and everything else, you'll lead a nice life.

Question: The remarks about having courage, no one could argue with; but those of us who have gray hairs or who are well established don't have to worry too much. But what I sense among the young people these days is a real concern over the risk taking in a highly competitive environment. Do you have any words of wisdom on this?

Hamming: I'll quote Ed David more. Ed David was concerned about the general loss of nerve in our society. It does seem to me that we've gone through various periods. Coming out of the war, coming out of Los Alamos where we built the bomb, coming out of building the radars and so on, there came into the mathematics department, and the research area, a group of people with a lot of guts. They've just seen things done; they've just won a war which was fantastic. We had reasons for having courage and therefore we did a great deal. I can't arrange that situation to do it again. I cannot blame the present generation for not having it, but I agree with what you say; I just cannot attach blame to it. It doesn't seem to me they have the desire for greatness; they lack the courage to do it. But we had, because we were in a favorable circumstance to have it; we just came through a tremendously successful war. In the war we were looking very, very bad for a long while; it was a very desperate struggle as you well know. And our success, I think, gave us courage and self confidence; that's why you see, beginning in the late forties through the fifties, a tremendous productivity at the labs which was stimulated from the earlier times. Because many of us were earlier forced to learn other things - we were forced to learn the things we didn't want to learn, we were forced to have an open door - and then we could exploit those things we learned. It is true, and I can't do anything about it; I cannot blame the present generation either. It's just a fact.

Question: Is there something management could or should do?

Hamming: Management can do very little. If you want to talk about managing research, that's a totally different talk. I'd take another hour doing that. This talk is about how the individual gets very successful research done in spite of anything the management does or in spite of any other opposition. And how do you do it? Just as I observe people doing it. It's just that simple and that hard!

Question: Is brainstorming a daily process?

Hamming: Once that was a very popular thing, but it seems not to have paid off. For myself I find it desirable to talk to other people; but a session of brainstorming is seldom worthwhile. I do go in to strictly talk to somebody and say, ``Look, I think there has to be something here. Here's what I think I see ...'' and then begin talking back and forth. But you want to pick capable people. To use another analogy, you know the idea called the `critical mass.' If you have enough stuff you have critical mass. There is also the idea I used to call `sound absorbers'. When you get too many sound absorbers, you give out an idea and they merely say, ``Yes, yes, yes.'' What you want to do is get that critical mass in action; ``Yes, that reminds me of so and so,'' or, ``Have you thought about that or this?'' When you talk to other people, you want to get rid of those sound absorbers who are nice people but merely say, ``Oh yes,'' and to find those who will stimulate you right back.

For example, you couldn't talk to John Pierce without being stimulated very quickly. There were a group of other people I used to talk with. For example there was Ed Gilbert; I used to go down to his office regularly and ask him questions and listen and come back stimulated. I picked my people carefully with whom I did or whom I didn't brainstorm because the sound absorbers are a curse. They are just nice guys; they fill the whole space and they contribute nothing except they absorb ideas and the new ideas just die away instead of echoing on. Yes, I find it necessary to talk to people. I think people with closed doors fail to do this so they fail to get their ideas sharpened, such as ``Did you ever notice something over here?'' I never knew anything about it - I can go over and look. Somebody points the way. On my visit here, I have already found several books that I must read when I get home. I talk to people and ask questions when I think they can answer me and give me clues that I do not know about. I go out and look!

Question: What kind of tradeoffs did you make in allocating your time for reading and writing and actually doing research?

Hamming: I believed, in my early days, that you should spend at least as much time in the polish and presentation as you did in the original research. Now at least 50% of the time must go for the presentation. It's a big, big number.

Question: How much effort should go into library work?

Hamming: It depends upon the field. I will say this about it. There was a fellow at Bell Labs, a very, very, smart guy. He was always in the library; he read everything. If you wanted references, you went to him and he gave you all kinds of references. But in the middle of forming these theories, I formed a proposition: there would be no effect named after him in the long run. He is now retired from Bell Labs and is an Adjunct Professor. He was very valuable; I'm not questioning that. He wrote some very good Physical Review articles; but there's no effect named after him because he read too much. If you read all the time what other people have done you will think the way they thought. If you want to think new thoughts that are different, then do what a lot of creative people do - get the problem reasonably clear and then refuse to look at any answers until you've thought the problem through carefully how you would do it, how you could slightly change the problem to be the correct one. So yes, you need to keep up. You need to keep up more to find out what the problems are than to read to find the solutions. The reading is necessary to know what is going on and what is possible. But reading to get the solutions does not seem to be the way to do great research. So I'll give you two answers. You read; but it is not the amount, it is the way you read that counts.

Question: How do you get your name attached to things?

Hamming: By doing great work. I'll tell you the hamming window one. I had given Tukey a hard time, quite a few times, and I got a phone call from him from Princeton to me at Murray Hill. I knew that he was writing up power spectra and he asked me if I would mind if he called a certain window a ``Hamming window.'' And I said to him, ``Come on, John; you know perfectly well I did only a small part of the work but you also did a lot.'' He said, ``Yes, Hamming, but you contributed a lot of small things; you're entitled to some credit.'' So he called it the hamming window. Now, let me go on. I had twitted John frequently about true greatness. I said true greatness is when your name is like ampere, watt, and fourier - when it's spelled with a lower case letter. That's how the hamming window came about.

Question: Dick, would you care to comment on the relative effectiveness between giving talks, writing papers, and writing books?

Hamming: In the short-haul, papers are very important if you want to stimulate someone tomorrow. If you want to get recognition long-haul, it seems to me writing books is more contribution because most of us need orientation. In this day of practically infinite knowledge, we need orientation to find our way. Let me tell you what infinite knowledge is. Since from the time of Newton to now, we have come close to doubling knowledge every 17 years, more or less. And we cope with that, essentially, by specialization. In the next 340 years at that rate, there will be 20 doublings, i.e. a million, and there will be a million fields of specialty for every one field now. It isn't going to happen. The present growth of knowledge will choke itself off until we get different tools. I believe that books which try to digest, coordinate, get rid of the duplication, get rid of the less fruitful methods and present the underlying ideas clearly of what we know now, will be the things the future generations will value. Public talks are necessary; private talks are necessary; written papers are necessary. But I am inclined to believe that, in the long-haul, books which leave out what's not essential are more important than books which tell you everything because you don't want to know everything. I don't want to know that much about penguins is the usual reply. You just want to know the essence.

Question: You mentioned the problem of the Nobel Prize and the subsequent notoriety of what was done to some of the careers. Isn't that kind of a much more broad problem of fame? What can one do?

Hamming: Some things you could do are the following. Somewhere around every seven years make a significant, if not complete, shift in your field. Thus, I shifted from numerical analysis, to hardware, to software, and so on, periodically, because you tend to use up your ideas. When you go to a new field, you have to start over as a baby. You are no longer the big mukity muk and you can start back there and you can start planting those acorns which will become the giant oaks. Shannon, I believe, ruined himself. In fact when he left Bell Labs, I said, ``That's the end of Shannon's scientific career.'' I received a lot of flak from my friends who said that Shannon was just as smart as ever. I said, ``Yes, he'll be just as smart, but that's the end of his scientific career,'' and I truly believe it was.

You have to change. You get tired after a while; you use up your originality in one field. You need to get something nearby. I'm not saying that you shift from music to theoretical physics to English literature; I mean within your field you should shift areas so that you don't go stale. You couldn't get away with forcing a change every seven years, but if you could, I would require a condition for doing research, being that you will change your field of research every seven years with a reasonable definition of what it means, or at the end of 10 years, management has the right to compel you to change. I would insist on a change because I'm serious. What happens to the old fellows is that they get a technique going; they keep on using it. They were marching in that direction which was right then, but the world changes. There's the new direction; but the old fellows are still marching in their former direction.

You need to get into a new field to get new viewpoints, and before you use up all the old ones. You can do something about this, but it takes effort and energy. It takes courage to say, ``Yes, I will give up my great reputation.'' For example, when error correcting codes were well launched, having these theories, I said, ``Hamming, you are going to quit reading papers in the field; you are going to ignore it completely; you are going to try and do something else other than coast on that.'' I deliberately refused to go on in that field. I wouldn't even read papers to try to force myself to have a chance to do something else. I managed myself, which is what I'm preaching in this whole talk. Knowing many of my own faults, I manage myself. I have a lot of faults, so I've got a lot of problems, i.e. a lot of possibilities of management.

Question: Would you compare research and management?

Hamming: If you want to be a great researcher, you won't make it being president of the company. If you want to be president of the company, that's another thing. I'm not against being president of the company. I just don't want to be. I think Ian Ross does a good job as President of Bell Labs. I'm not against it; but you have to be clear on what you want. Furthermore, when you're young, you may have picked wanting to be a great scientist, but as you live longer, you may change your mind. For instance, I went to my boss, Bode, one day and said, ``Why did you ever become department head? Why didn't you just be a good scientist?'' He said, ``Hamming, I had a vision of what mathematics should be in Bell Laboratories. And I saw if that vision was going to be realized, I had to make it happen; I had to be department head.'' When your vision of what you want to do is what you can do single-handedly, then you should pursue it. The day your vision, what you think needs to be done, is bigger than what you can do single-handedly, then you have to move toward management. And the bigger the vision is, the farther in management you have to go. If you have a vision of what the whole laboratory should be, or the whole Bell System, you have to get there to make it happen. You can't make it happen from the bottom very easily. It depends upon what goals and what desires you have. And as they change in life, you have to be prepared to change. I chose to avoid management because I preferred to do what I could do single-handedly. But that's the choice that I made, and it is biased. Each person is entitled to their choice. Keep an open mind. But when you do choose a path, for heaven's sake be aware of what you have done and the choice you have made. Don't try to do both sides.

Question: How important is one's own expectation or how important is it to be in a group or surrounded by people who expect great work from you?

Hamming: At Bell Labs everyone expected good work from me - it was a big help. Everybody expects you to do a good job, so you do, if you've got pride. I think it's very valuable to have first-class people around. I sought out the best people. The moment that physics table lost the best people, I left. The moment I saw that the same was true of the chemistry table, I left. I tried to go with people who had great ability so I could learn from them and who would expect great results out of me. By deliberately managing myself, I think I did much better than laissez faire.

Question: You, at the outset of your talk, minimized or played down luck; but you seemed also to gloss over the circumstances that got you to Los Alamos, that got you to Chicago, that got you to Bell Laboratories.

Hamming: There was some luck. On the other hand I don't know the alternate branches. Until you can say that the other branches would not have been equally or more successful, I can't say. Is it luck the particular thing you do? For example, when I met Feynman at Los Alamos, I knew he was going to get a Nobel Prize. I didn't know what for. But I knew darn well he was going to do great work. No matter what directions came up in the future, this man would do great work. And sure enough, he did do great work. It isn't that you only do a little great work at this circumstance and that was luck, there are many opportunities sooner or later. There are a whole pail full of opportunities, of which, if you're in this situation, you seize one and you're great over there instead of over here. There is an element of luck, yes and no. Luck favors a prepared mind; luck favors a prepared person. It is not guaranteed; I don't guarantee success as being absolutely certain. I'd say luck changes the odds, but there is some definite control on the part of the individual.

Go forth, then, and do great work!