← Quora archive  ·  2011 Nov 28, 2011 08:15 AM PST

Question

Is it really possible to make your own luck?

Answer

"For example, when I came to Bell Labs, I shared an office for a while with Shannon. At the same time he was doing information theory, I was doing coding theory. It is suspicious that the two of us did it at the same place and at the same time - it was in the atmosphere. And you can say, ``Yes, it was luck.'' On the other hand you can say, ``But why of all the people in Bell Labs then were those the two who did it?'' Yes, it is partly luck, and partly it is the prepared mind; but `partly' is the other thing I'm going to talk about. So, although I'll come back several more times to luck, I want to dispose of this matter of luck as being the sole criterion whether you do great work or not. I claim you have some, but not total, control over it. And I will quote, finally, Newton on the matter. Newton said, ``If others would think as hard as I did, then they would get similar results.''

...

Let me start not logically, but psychologically. I find that the major objection is that people think great science is done by luck. It's all a matter of luck. Well, consider Einstein. Note how many different things he did that were good. Was it all luck? Wasn't it a little too repetitive? Consider Shannon. He didn't do just information theory. Several years before, he did some other good things and some which are still locked up in the security of cryptography. He did many good things.

You see again and again, that it is more than one thing from a good person. Once in a while a person does only one thing in his whole life, and we'll talk about that later, but a lot of times there is repetition. I claim that luck will not cover everything. And I will cite Pasteur who said, ``Luck favors the prepared mind.'' And I think that says it the way I believe it. There is indeed an element of luck, and no, there isn't. The prepared mind sooner or later finds something important and does it. So yes, it is luck. The particular thing you do is luck, but that you do something is not."

-- You and Your Research, talk by Richard Hamming

http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~robi...

Above a baseline of equal opportunity (being born in America instead of say, in a brothel in Cambodia), and with similar talent levels, "luck" is a combination of two factors when you get started: openness to experience and adaptability (so you encounter new options and don't have your mind set on one narrow way of living your life).

Once you get luck started, positive enforcement takes over, and the key trait in staying lucky is being careful about what you choose to get into, since you will attract more opportunities than you can handle.generally the way to kill luck is to choose prestige over curiosity: taking the prestigious job instead of the one that intrigues you in a no-name place, for instance.