Have you ever been troubled about the fact that even after putting in a very good effort you do not enjoy the success you wish for? A lot of factors seem to have come in which were not considered earlier. Some would condemn that to a yet inexplicable factor called luck, while some would lay the responsibility on themselves and rue the fact that their effort might not have been enough. These two styles of interpretation are in line with the classical argument about the development of a person. One line of thought suggests that the environment is all that shapes a personality while another professes that the personality is hard coded into one's genes and is completely independent of the influence of the environment. Well,the most acceptable opinion for this argument has been midway which says though some features are hard coded in the genes, the environment does have a significant influence on the other aspects of the personality with no agreed weights assigned to the contributing factors. On similar lines, if we assume that a person's effort and his environment both end up contributing to his failure or success, then can a framework be developed to ascertain which factor has contributed most? We do have theories that can predict things as random as turbulence in an airflow. Can such phenomenon also be modeled then?
Most people who have seen the movie "The curious case of Benjamin Button" would remember the representation of the theory of unintended consequences, leading to an accident involving the female lead. Similarly in today's globalized world, we have seen the actions of the finance sector causing distress to a huge number of people, most of whom were not even remotely related to that sector. If we attempt to generalize such effects, one could say that every action committed by any living being, in any corner of the world would have an effect on your life, with the magnitude of the effect decided by say the remoteness of the person to your activities. Now to ascertain the success or failure of an event, one would need to add up all the components brought in by the actions of the entire world population with the component of the individual's own effort . Such a conceptualization indicates that the result of our actions is not completely in our own hands and seems to reinstate the Gita Updesh. If it is so, then why are some individuals consistently more successful?
One could say such people work harder, have better capabilities and so on. But one trait that definitely differentiates such people would be adaptability. The ability to dynamically respond to changes in the environment. This one particular dynamic trait, holds the potential to negate the effects of the environment and help the person be more capable of effecting the desired outcomes. This trait differentiates the best, from the rest!
The theory is not so crazy.
ReplyDeleteJust to add...
Adapting to environment may sometimes imply your submission to external factors...though generally its a successful ploy...many a times, it wont pay off and those times u have to believe in what u think is correct...otherwise many things would never have been possible...if one goes through history or evolution....because our action/thought will also have an effect on the environment, small or large.
olive
well i agree with the theory. And critically i would rather not analyze the theory coz each one of us have a different one and have all the right to differ on aspects.
ReplyDeleteI would rather comment about your language. You tend to use long sentences which after sometimes doesn't hold the attention of the reader and confuse them. So if you try and use a little smaller ones you would be able to communicate in a more effective manner.
Aditi.
You pulled off another philosophical one!! pretty good one too! But I think success is a relative term. It varies with the perspective of the person judging the success.
ReplyDeleteNice article man...
ReplyDeleteThe Butterfly effect seems more in consonance with the subject in discussion than environment and the oft-called upon 'luck'. A chain of events entirely unintentional yet surprisingly evident in hind-sight makes one a success and a failure (this too a highly relative a term).
ReplyDeleteThe theory you propound will find takers no doubt and parts of it forms a logical continuum but as commented above, its an individual assessment that varies with people.
Neat post. Dint know you blogged. Does this have anything to do with the season? :-)
hmmm adaptability is an intresting phenomenon
ReplyDeleteTrue, very true.
ReplyDeletenice work karthik :)
ReplyDelete