Accomplishment Perceived Against the Odds

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Dear fellow investors,

In an upcoming episode of A Book With Legs podcast, we interviewed Robert Hagstrom on his book, Investing: The Last Liberal Art. Hagstrom talked about how Bill Miller got him involved with the Santa Fe Institute. He mentioned that he asked Bill why it matters to know about Hopi tribes and other things that seemed off-topic compared to financial information. He said that Miller told him that was the whole point. It wasn’t financial. It was another realm of study that could teach him more intellectually.

Personally, this had my mind racing on the idea that we can be so mentally siloed. Like many people who visit the Hawaiian Islands, I was aware of Polynesian immigration patterns over time. I began searching for a book on the subject and quickly landed on a book by Nicholas Thomas titled The Voyagers. After reading Thomas’ work, I was reminded how people with a shared tradition and culture could, despite future unknowns, master skills that cause vast areas to be enriched. This was accomplished against the odds perceived by the western world. What a story for investors and stock pickers to delight in!

The Voyagers is an anthropological book looking at the known artifacts and historical discussion of the movements of people from Melanesia to Micronesia to Polynesia. Much of the early discussions of these people groups were led by the British. Captain Cook’s first ship, the Endeavor, left England in August 1768. As Thomas wrote:

What was of decisive importance was that Cook and those who sailed with him visit an unprecedented range of islands across the north and south pacific. And the seamen, artists, and scientists who accompanied him included individuals with interests and imaginations that were wide-ranging, indeed remarkable—even by the standards of the enlightenment.

The Endeavor’s primary objective was to, on behalf of the Royal Society, observe Venus from Tahiti to help calculate the distance from the sun. Again, these were intellectuals taking risks to go into an unknown future to study astronomy, but also people, geography, customs, botany, and religion. As Thomas noted, “…his voyages were extraordinarily significant, although for reasons that have little to do with Cook’s personality and the enduringly contentious questions of whether his disposition towards Indigenous people was essentially humane or invasive and murderous.” These were not perfect people by any means, but their findings are extraordinary.

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