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How to Think Like Elon Musk by@shivanijha
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1,450 reads

How to Think Like Elon Musk

by shivani jhaSeptember 29th, 2020
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How to Think Like Elon Musk: The secret-sauce of learning behind the world's greatest mind, Elon musk. Musk was an avid reader from his childhood and read two books a day. Musk's booming knowledge is the result of the foundation seed that Musk planted for himself in his initial years. Musk uses first principle, in simple terms, it is the act of boiling a process down to the fundamentals that are true and re-building from there. Musk says that rebuilding the core of knowledge in the trunk (in case of a tree) is more essential. Connecting is the superpower that you can’t remember what you’re not able to connect.

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When a South African school boy bullied for “being too smart” becomes a trailblazer for billion dollar companies in future — the world wants to peep  into his mind.

Elon Musk is a man who dreamt of going all the way to the moon and did it.

No wonder sometimes you think, “How can someone inject such a high dose of entrepreneurship?”

Starting with co-founding a software company and PayPal, founding X.com an online bank to jumping into physics before founding space X, joining Tesla motors, learning about electric vehicles.

The list goes on and on and on…

Let’s turn back the time, Musk was an avid reader from his childhood— as per his brother Kimbal, Musk read two books a day — no matter what they were about.

His booming knowledge is the result of the foundation seed that Musk planted for himself in his initial years. Meanwhile, learning one new skill can be pretty hard for people like “You”.

I will later include myself in the list.

But for Elon musk, it’s all about these two golden rules: enough to bust the myth "Jack of all trades”.

Fundamentals are building blocks

Brain coach Jim Kwik says “Musk brought me in because he realized, like most successful people on the planet realize, to be successful, you have to always be learning,” when Musk hired him for coaching people in Space X.

So what’s the catch here?

As Einstein says “If you want to understand it well, explain it”. When faced, this question on how he manages to learn everything? In response, Musk wrote,
“One bit of advice: it is important to view knowledge as sort of a semantic tree — make sure you understand the fundamental principles, i.e. the trunk and big branches, before you get into the leaves/details or there is nothing for them to hang on to.”

He shared his nuggets of wisdom, everything he applied, from starting PayPal to Tesla and space X.

Basically, he uses first principle, in simple terms, it is the act of boiling a process down to the fundamentals that are true and re-building from there.

He metaphorically says that rebuilding the core of knowledge in the trunk (in case of a tree) is more essential.

Example : Imagine you have 3 things

  • A bicycle
  • A car
  • A motorboat with a flying balloon behind it

 Now, let’s break it down into single constituent parts

  • Bicycle : handle, gear, seat, wheels
  • Car: engine, metal pieces, tyres
  • Motorboat: flying balloon, motor, a boat

What can you create from these parts? In a nutshell, this is the secret-sauce of learning behind the world's greatest mind, Elon musk.

Connecting is the superpower  

You can’t remember what you can’t connect. This is where Musk shines.

By constantly looking at objects, people we meet and the environment we live in, it turns out we start building muscles in part of our brain responsible for the way we understand words, meanings and concepts.

As per many memory experts, attaching meaning or factual knowledge to any of this sensory input is called semantic encoding.

For example, connecting things with someone you know, like going back to your childhood “Christian from Alaska where my brothers lives"  

(You are encoding Christian as a name with semantic memory).

Here’s how Elon musk applied his learning method –

  • Using technology to build PayPal.
  • Using physics to create a boring company.
  • Using Aerospace to build falcon rockets, space X.
  • Idealizing trains in Hyper loop concept.
  • Using web technology to create his first web software company Zip 2.

Keith Holy Oak, a UCLA professor of psychology and one of the world’s leading thinkers, recommends people to ask themselves questions like these “What does this remind me of?”, and “Why does this remind me of it?”.

The reason we fail to remember names of strangers is that we fail to connect.

Bottom line — We can appreciate his heroic work ethic but it’s more about the process he follows. There is no magic or superpowers behind it, the key takeaway is :

  • Not following the set-up rules and dogma of specialization.
  • Having the ability to move beyond the traditional rule or thoughts.
  • Learn the fundamentals and relate it with your real life

After reading this, you may not become the next Mars man but at least you can keep learning and fueling your future.