"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Is it better to be smart or disciplined?

There must be something in the water up there in Canada that turns conservative journalists into humorous, intelligent, writing machines. Or maybe it is just that they work really hard at it. Denyse O’Leary is joining Mark Steyn as one of our very favorite writers. She is prolific, funny, and a grandma to boot. I do not know how she finds all the stuff she finds, but it is interesting and written with such good humor that it is sometimes hard to tell that she is at war with the materialist left. Mindful Hack and Post-Darwinist are two of her blogs that we read. She is also a contributor at Uncommon Descent and she writes books.

I think she wrote this recent post on Mindful Hack with our little family in mind. We work very hard, sometimes successfully, at avoiding some of the pitfalls common to many homeschoolers. Some of us tend to believe our children are smarter than other children, but we think it is OK to believe that because we are so humble about it. It turns out that ability to perform well on those things that measure academic success are probably more attributable to hard work than to raw intelligence. Grandma was right all along, smart may help, but hard work and discipline are essential.

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6 Comments

  1. Yes, Dad. It is better to be smart OR disciplined.

  2. Dad

    Well, if you have to choose, which is better? You are making my point for me!!! Especially on the humility thing! In some cases that humility is not misplaced!

    Discipline is the only one over which we have any short-term control!

  3. Hey, Dad! Have you seen this? It’s a WYSIWIG Fir3fox plugin for web development.

  4. Dad

    I cannot see the link Christian.

  5. Discipline and motivation will win. I’ve heard the comment, attributed to Edison and/or Einstein, that goes something like:

    Genius is 2% Inspiration and 98% Perspiration

    (not sure the source, but I agree with it)

    -Mark

  6. Dad

    Isn’t that the truth, Mark. As an electrical engineer, you have been through an extremely difficult undergraduate degree that requires a lot of intelligence. I have seen a lot of very smart people fail in their efforts at that degree, but the ones that made it were the ones that worked hard.

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