pgstrata
Fashionable Problems
2

December 2019

3

I've seen the same pattern in many different fields: even though lots of people have worked hard in the field, only a small fraction of the space of possibilities has been explored, because they've all worked on similar things.

3

In many fields, only a small fraction of the possible space gets explored, because everyone works on similar things.

2–3

In many fields, lots of people work hard yet only a small fraction of the space of possibilities gets explored, because they've all worked on similar things.

5

Even the smartest, most imaginative people are surprisingly conservative when deciding what to work on.

6

People who would never dream of being fashionable in any other way get sucked into working on fashionable problems.

5–6

Even the smartest people are conservative about what to work on, and get sucked into fashionable problems.

5–6

Even the smartest, most imaginative people are surprisingly conservative about what to work on, and get sucked into fashionable problems.

8

If you want to try working on unfashionable problems, one of the best places to look is in fields that people think have already been fully explored: essays, Lisp, venture funding — you may notice a pattern here.

9

If you can find a new approach into a big but apparently played out field, the value of whatever you discover will be multiplied [blocked] by its enormous surface area.

8–9

For unfashionable problems, look in fields thought fully explored: essays, Lisp, venture funding — notice a pattern? A new approach into a played-out field is multiplied [blocked] by its surface area.

8–9

To work on unfashionable problems, look in fields thought played out—essays, Lisp, venture funding. A new approach into a big field is multiplied by its enormous surface area.

11

The best protection against getting drawn into working on the same things as everyone else may be to genuinely love [blocked] what you're doing.

12

Then you'll continue to work on it even if you make the same mistake as other people and think that it's too marginal to matter.

11–12

The best protection may be to genuinely love [blocked] what you're doing, so you keep at it even when it seems too marginal to matter.

11–12

The best protection against working on the same things as everyone else may be to genuinely love what you're doing, so you keep at it even when it seems too marginal to matter.