yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Bill Clinton on Lifelong Learning | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

I think the most important thing that I have learned is that there's more to learn. That we should -- that we should all be hungry for a lifetime. I mean, for example, at my next birthday I'll be 68. All the great scientific discoveries made by all the great geniuses were largely made when they were in their 20s and 30s.

And yet I became, about two years ago, obsessed with particle physics, and I was determined to understand it before I died. I could not have done that if I hadn't learned to read when I was young. If I hadn't had the opportunity to study science courses in my high school, and I lived in the second poorest state in the United States, which most people my age in my state did not have.

I happened to go to a bigger high school with people who understood we had to get good science and math teachers there. And if I hadn't gone to, in my case, Georgetown University, which was a Jesuit University, and I hadn't been subject to the kind of rigors that the Jesuits imposed which made me realize that however much I thought I knew and however smart I was, I didn't know very much and I wasn't very smart. I had a lot to learn.

So that's the most important thing I learned: that your brain is a gift. And we now know that people well into their late 60s and 70s can form new neural networks. So that even though your brain begins to shrink in your 30s and does throughout your life, since none of us ever use even close to half of our brainpower, we got a lot left, and on our last day on earth, we'll have a lot left.

So, the idea that we now know, as a scientific measure because of all the brain scanning technology, that we can form these networks and that we form them best, we're most likely to form new neural networks later in life by learning something new.

So if -- I said I was interested in particle physics and also in astrophysics, and I'm trying to figure out what it means that we've located 20 planets outside our solar system in the last five years that seem to have enough density and be far enough away from their suns that they might be able to support life. That may be the answer to the Russia Ukraine problem; an attack from outer space will immediately unite us all.

Members of Congress in the U.S. will immediately start hugging each other and singing Kumbaya. But anyway, I can form new neural networks doing that because I don't know anything about it, or I didn't when I started. A theoretical physicist would do better going to Suzuki piano lessons with his grandchild or her grandchild and just playing if you knew nothing about music.

But this is an incredible thing that the most important thing I learned is that it's important to keep on learning. That you should stay hungry and that the greatest gift can be even as your body begins to fail; if your mind's still working, you need to use it.

More Articles

View All
A Look Inside Billionaire Seth Klarman's Portfolio
Seth Klarman is one of the most highly respected investors ever. He is a value investor and portfolio manager of the investment partnership, the Baupost Group, founded in 1983. The Baupost Group now manages $7 billion and has average returns of nearly 20%…
How To Measure The Tiniest Forces In The Universe
This is 10 micrograms. You think that I might be able to see? I think you might be able to. Oh boy. It’s an arrow right there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. This flashlight will help. I feel like I need to get video of this. [Dr. Shaw] I don’t know how. (Dr. Shaw la…
The Most Insane Weapon You Never Heard About
In the 1950s, the US began the top secret project Sundial; most of it is still classified. The goal: a single nuclear bomb so powerful it would destroy all of human civilization. Conceived in cold logic from the mind of a genius scientist, Sundial had the…
The Space Race | Meet Ed Dwight | National Geographic Documentary Films
My hope was just getting into space in any kind of way, but they were not gonna let that happen. And they said, number one, I wasn’t tall enough. I was Catholic. I wasn’t Black enough. I was not the model of the Negro race. I was a one-man operation when …
Homeroom with Sal & Lester Holt - Friday, August 14
Hi everyone, Sal here from Khan Academy. Welcome to our homeroom live stream. Very excited about the conversation we’re about to have with Lester Holt. Uh, before we jump into that conversation, I will make a few of my standard announcements. Uh, one, j…
Integrating power series | Series | AP Calculus BC | Khan Academy
So we’re told that ( f(x) ) is equal to the infinite series we’re going from ( n = 1 ) to infinity of ( \frac{n + 1}{4^{n + 1}} x^n ). What we want to figure out is what is the definite integral from 0 to 1 of this ( f(x) ). And like always, if you feel i…