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“Skill is a cellular insulation that wraps neural circuits and that grows in response to certain signals.”
“Redwoods differ from roses but both grow through photosynthesis. Elephants differ from amoebas but both use the same cellular mechanism to convert food into energy. Tennis players, singers, and painters don’t seem to have much in common but they all get better by gradually improving timing and speed and accuracy, by honing neural circuitry, by obeying the rules of the talent code—in short, by growing more myelin.”
By comparing the talent code to the laws of nature, Coyle situates his theory as universal. The imagery of plants and animals he uses helps frame his argument as natural and scientific. These examples foster relatability but also evoke a sense of simplicity and inevitability. Likening myelin building to more familiar biological processes like photosynthesis helps ground the concept of skill-building. This comparison serves to frame his ideas within a broader scientific context, suggesting that the process of talent development is not an abstract or mysterious concept but rather a comprehensible one.
“Each was a statistical impossibility, a mouse that had not only roared but that had somehow come to rule the forest. But how?”
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