The Power of Unconventional Thinking | David McWilliams | TED
Intro (0s)
- David McWilliams originally planned to speak early at TED and use the remaining time to relax and be inspired by others' ideas.
- He relates a change in the schedule to Mike Tyson's quote about plans failing when faced with challenges, humorously noting the extra difficulty of remaining sober.
- McWilliams remarks that the TED talks collectively deal with the impact of rapid change across various dimensions of life.
The pace of change (1m23s)
- Citing Lenin, McWilliams indicates that we experience periods where change is abrupt and significant.
- He expresses skepticism toward traditional economic tools like graphs and charts for analyzing such change, preferring poetry as his analytical tool.
- He references W.B. Yeats's poem "The Second Coming" to illustrate how each generation perceives its crises as unique and monumental.
His World is Changing & Things Fall Apart (3m30s) (4m9s)
- McWilliams links historical changes that upended empires and led to Ireland's independence to similar feelings of upheaval today.
- He quotes Yeats's observation that societal breakdown occurs when traditional structures fail and the extremes dominate over moderates.
The Contrast (5m21s)
- The speaker points out Yeats's accurate prediction of political chaos, contrasting it with experts’ failed economic forecasts of the early 20th century.
- He argues that artists like Yeats can often foresee tipping points better than conventional thinkers because they permit themselves to think unconventionally.
Back to School & Intelligence (6m43s) (7m27s)
- Reflecting back on school, McWilliams discusses how traditional educational systems often fail to recognize multiple forms of intelligence.
- He laments that many people with diverse skills felt stupid due to the narrow definitions of intelligence in school.
Confirmation Bias (9m23s)
- McWilliams talks about confirmation bias in professional settings where employing people who share our biases leads to groupthink.
- This results in overconfidence and a lack of critical self-assessment, possibly leading to poor decision-making.
The Bank Robbery (12m15s)
- He cites the Dunning-Kruger effect, where individuals overestimate their abilities, as exemplified by a humorous anecdote of a would-be bank robber believing he was invisible after covering his face with lemon juice.
- The effect is observed more in men than in women, an observation McWilliams humorously notes is evident in his family experiences.
The Financial Crisis (13m52s)
- Intelligent, overconfident individuals in financial institutions missed the 2008 crisis.
- The Queen of England questioned experts' failure to foresee the crisis.
- Conventional thinkers prefer to find proof to support their views rather than change them.
- Leonard Cohen suggested that flaws ("cracks") are opportunities to understand the big picture.