TV
Tiger vs Federer: why the opening story matters
Range ep1 — Tiger vs Federer
TH
The head-start myth: when early specialization works
Range ep2 — The head-start myth
KV
Kind vs wicked worlds
Range ep3 — Kind vs wicked worlds
WM
Why modern work got more wicked
Range ep4 — Why modern work got more wicked
DD
Desirable difficulties: learning that feels slow but sticks
Range ep5: Desirable difficulties
IW
Interleaving: why mixing practice beats drilling
Range ep6: Interleaving practice
🎾
Analogical thinking as range in action
Range ep7: Analogical thinking
TO
Thinking outside experience: importing frames from elsewhere
Range ep8: Importing frames
OA
Outsider advantage and distant analogies
Range ep9: Outsider advantage
GV
Grit vs fit: when persistence becomes sunk cost
Range ep10: Grit vs fit
PS
Possible selves: identity as a thing you test
Range ep11: Possible selves
MQ
Match quality: why exploration improves eventual commitment
Range ep12: Match quality
LT
Lateral thinking with old tools
Range ep13: Lateral thinking with old tools
NG
Nintendo/Game Boy style withered technology innovation
Range ep14: Nintendo and withered tech
SE
Specialists, experts, and blind spots
Range ep15: Experts and blind spots
FA
Forecasting and why breadth can beat credentials
Range ep16: Forecasting and breadth
WE
When experts get fooled by familiar patterns
Range ep17: Familiar pattern traps
DF
Dropping familiar tools under stress
Range ep18: Dropping familiar tools
CE
Cognitive entrenchment and unlearning
Range ep19: Cognitive entrenchment
DA
Deliberate amateurs: keeping beginner vision alive
Range ep20: Deliberate amateurs
GI
Generalists inside teams: why diversity of training matters
Range ep21: Generalist teams
🎾
What Range does not claim: limits and critiques
Range ep22: Limits and critiques
AP
A personal career/learning playbook from the book
Range ep23: Career learning playbook
FS
Final synthesis: specialize late, but not aimlessly
Range ep24: Specialize late, not aimlessly