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by blundergoat
90 days ago
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The detail about Hoare sitting in the front row at conferences taking notes on specialized topics (after retiring from Oxford, after a Turing Award, after decades of foundational work) is the part of this piece that will stick with me. There's a certain kind of senior figure who stops learning once they reach eminence. Hoare clearly wasn't that. Meyer's phrase "a combination of pride and humility" nails it. |
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I like to think I'm the same way; I haven't won a Turing award yet, and I don't even have a PhD, but I've always been someone who is sort of obsessed with learning new things about software and math. It's basically been the only edge I've had over most of my peers: my willingness to learn new things to try and keep up with trends. Peoples' unwillingness to learn new things has been highlighted recently with AI, but tech has famously always progressed pretty quickly and I've always been terrified of being left behind.
I've grown to really respect lifelong learners. It's very easy (and tempting!) to stop learning after university, but I think it's worth it to never feel like you've learned "enough". My dad is looking to retire soonish, and he's considering re-enrolling in University to get a masters in theoretical physics since he always felt he should have learned that better. I hope I'm the same way when I'm his age.