True mastery demands going beyond the rules to learn for yourself | Aeon Videos
Briefly

True mastery demands going beyond the rules to learn for yourself | Aeon Videos
"The German philosopher Martin Heidegger believed that human knowledge, at its most foundational and meaningful, is ineffable. Moreover, it requires stepping beyond what one sees as the established rules and into the realm of the unknown. Think of a master jazz musician or an elite athlete who, after facing an unpredictable moment, would find it impossible to convey precisely how and why they did what they did to deliver a peak performance."
"In this excerpt from his feature-length documentary Being in the World (2010), the Italian American director Tao Ruspoli interrogates Heidegger's ideas via conversations with philosophers, including the late Hubert Dreyfus, and practitioners such as a chef, a carpenter and a speedboater. Focusing on highly skilled individuals across a wide variety of domains, the film illustrates something universal - how venturing beyond the comfortable and the quotidian is essential to mastering our own lives."
Heidegger holds that foundational human knowledge is ineffable and that meaningful knowing requires stepping beyond established rules into the realm of the unknown. Master practitioners often cannot articulate exactly how they achieve peak performance after unpredictable events, as seen in master jazz musicians and elite athletes. Conversations with philosophers such as Hubert Dreyfus and with practitioners including a chef, a carpenter and a speedboater illuminate how skilled coping depends on embodied, tacit know-how. Attention to highly skilled individuals across diverse domains reveals that risking the comfortable and the quotidian is central to mastering one’s own life.
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