Test Special Issue

Game Change

Do elite athletes really make elite employees?

Sports, we tend to assume, offer a sharp-edged reflection of business life in microcosm — leadership under pressure, the winning mentality, valuable lessons drawn from loss. It’s all there. Just kick back with a beer and a pizza and watch your pathway to workplace success unfold on game day. Well, it turns out that the connections are often far more nuanced than we might have presumed. Do elite athletes really make elite employees? What’s the connection between Swedish pragmatics in soccer and a thriving startup culture? Have you factored in the difference between “wicked” and “kind” environments (and what does that even mean)? We investigate all of these pivotal tangents, and much more, in this Big Think special collection of essays, interviews, and curated book excerpts. Forget everything you’ve been told about the synergies between sports and business. It’s time to rewrite the rules.

Blue background with the words "Game Change" in white, surrounded by strategic game symbols and graphs in the background.
Presented by
John Templeton Foundation
2mins
“Even a blind person knows the shape of the parts of a car,” George Church says. “We didn’t know the shape of anything that we are made out of.”
3mins
It all started with dragonfly larvae in his backyard.
Gilbert would like to interview my great, great, great granddaughter.
1mins
Dan Gilbert says technology could make us happier if we used it in the right ways.
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An age of believing our eyes, rather than our elders.
1mins
We don’t have everything we want, but we sure have a lot, says Dan Gilbert.
1mins
Dan Gilbert says the environment should be the most pressing issue because of its urgency and gay marriage, precisely because it is a non-issue.
2mins
Interesting things happen when two sides of the brain duke it out.
2mins
Belief in something we absolutely can’t see, for which there’s no evidence, cuts against the grain of what it means to be a scientist to me.
1mins
Science is the worst way of knowing except for all the other ways of knowing.
Kant is the foundation for modern psychology, Gilbert says.
1mins
Scientific psychology from science fiction.
1mins
Simply put, good science is creative, says Dan Gilbert.
1mins
Dan Gilbert’s creative process involves a lot of puzzling and puzzling and puzzling.
2mins
Gilbert looks forward to answers to questions we haven’t even asked yet.
6mins
Gilbert discusses the nature of happiness and his work in affective forecasting, which is the process by which people look into their future and make predictions about what they’ll like […]
1mins
Daniel Gilbert wandered into psychology.
2mins
Dershowitz would like to pick the brain of an innovative psychologist.