Small minds are concerned with the extraordinary, great minds with the ordinary. — Blaise Pascal
Small minds are concerned with the extraordinary, great minds with the ordinary.
Author: Blaise Pascal
Insight: We tend to think the opposite: that brilliant people chase exotic ideas and dramatic breakthroughs, while ordinary folks get stuck in routine. But Pascal points at something real that we miss. When you're genuinely trying to understand something—whether it's how people actually make decisions, why relationships fall apart, or what makes a community work—you have to care deeply about the mundane details. The small talk. The habits no one writes about. The normal day that repeats itself a thousand times. There's actually a kind of intellectual humility here. It's easy to get seduced by big theories and bold pronouncements. Harder to sit with ordinary experience long enough to see what's actually true about it. A person obsessed with finding the "one weird trick" or the hidden secret might be running from the real work—which is paying attention to what's already in front of them. The extraordinary often reveals itself through mastery of the ordinary, not escape from it. This matters now because we're drowning in the exotic. Every feed sells us the unusual, the outrageous, the revolutionary. But the people who actually change things tend to be the ones who understand the everyday so well they can improve it. That's not boring. That's where the real power lives.