Eric Weiner: "The Geography of Genius" | Talks at Google
New York Times best-selling author
Eric Weiner visited
Google's
Mountain View campus to discuss his new book, "The
Geography of
Genius."
In his previous
New York Times bestseller The Geography of Bliss (2008), Eric Weiner searched for the happiest places in the world. Now, in "The Geography of Genius," he sets out to examine the connection between our surroundings and our most innovative ideas.
Weiner writes: “The toddler steps of incremental innovation don’t earn you a patent, or the title of genius. Only a leap does. The question that intrigues someone such as myself, a creature of geography and a student of history, is not simply what these leaps look like but where, and when, they take place… certain places, at certain times, produced a bumper crop of brilliant minds and good ideas. The question is why.”
In an attempt to find the answer, Weiner travels the globe exploring the history of ancient
Athens,
Song Dynasty Hangzhou,
Renaissance Florence,
Enlightenment Edinburgh,
Calcutta,
Vienna of
1900, and today’s
Silicon Valley, illustrating how certain urban settings are conducive to ingenuity. With insightful humor, Weiner walks the same paths as the geniuses who flourished in these places, to see if the spirit of what inspired figures like
Socrates,
Michelangelo, and
Mozart still remains.
Along the way, Weiner describes important research about genius and the contribution geography can make to creativity. He learns why geniuses thrive during times of tension and even chaos, how oysters (yes, oysters) played a pivotal role in the
Scottish Enlightenment, how the
Renaissance may never have happened if not for the plague, and why the genius of Silicon Valley has little to do with technology.
Provocative and entertaining, THE GEOGRAPHY OF
GENIUS is an informed romp through history that will start a national conversation about the importance of culture in nurturing creativity. Weiner shows we need to change the way we think about creative genius—not simply as a matter of genetics or even hard work but, rather, the fruits of a culture that encourages ingenuity. Genius, he argues, is not a private act but a public commitment. As he writes: “If it takes a village to raise a child… it takes a city to raise a genius.”
Eric Weiner is a philosophical traveler and recovering malcontent. His books include the New York Times bestseller The Geography of Bliss and
Man Seeks God. A former foreign correspondent for
NPR, his work has appeared in
Slate,
Quartz,
Foreign Policy, the
BBC,
AFAR,
The Best American Travel Writing, and elsewhere.
For some reason, he lives in the
Washington, D.C. area.