Y11W36VC Timing, talent, and the luck question
Two children are born on the same day in Canberra. One grows up to captain the Australian Test team; the other never plays cricket seriously. How much of the difference is talent, effort, or something else? This week's article examines a body of research on the roles of timing, talent, and luck in what we call success — and why successful people, in particular, systematically underestimate the role of luck in their own lives.
Core Vocabulary
compound
/ˈkɒmpaʊnd/|com·pound
verb
To accumulate and build on itself over time; to increase through the addition of gains to existing gains.
Word Breakdown: Latin: componere = to put together; com- (together) + ponere (to place)
Word family: compounding (adj/gerund), compound interest (n)
Synonyms: accumulate, build on itself, snowball, grow exponentially
Collocations: compound over time, advantages compound, compound interest, begin to compound
Example: Early advantages in education, networks, and resources compound — small initial differences between people grow larger over time as each advantage creates conditions for further advantage.
windfall
/ˈwɪndfɔːl/|wind·fall
noun
An unexpected and unearned benefit or piece of good fortune; a gain that arrives without having been directly worked for.
Word Breakdown: From wind + fall: originally fruit blown from a tree by the wind — unexpected bounty; extended to any unexpected gain
Synonyms: unexpected gain, unearned benefit, lucky break, stroke of luck
Collocations: financial windfall, unexpected windfall, receive a windfall, a windfall of opportunity
Example: Being born in a country with strong educational institutions, in a stable family, or in a growing industry are forms of windfall — advantages that shape outcomes but were not earned.
deserve
/dɪˈzɜːv/|de·serve
verb
To merit something through one's actions, qualities, or efforts; to have a rightful claim to something as a reward or consequence.
Word Breakdown: Latin: deservire = to serve zealously; de- (intensive) + servire (to serve)
Word family: deserving (adj), deserved (adj), deservedly (adv)
Synonyms: merit, earn, warrant, be entitled to
Collocations: deserve credit, deserve success, deserve better, deserve the outcome
Example: The question the article raises is whether those who succeed genuinely deserve their success — or whether luck, timing, and structural advantage explain more of the outcome than we admit.
attribute
/əˈtrɪbjuːt/|at·trib·ute
verb
To assign the cause or credit for something to a particular source; to explain an outcome by reference to a cause.
Word Breakdown: Latin: attributere = to assign; ad- (to) + tribuere (to give)
Word family: attribution (n), attributable (adj)
Synonyms: credit, ascribe, assign, put down to
Collocations: attribute success to, attribute failure to, attribute the outcome, attribute to luck
Example: We tend to attribute our successes to our ability and our failures to circumstance — a self-serving pattern known as attribution bias.
contingent
/kənˈtɪndʒənt/|con·tin·gent
adjective
Depending on chance or particular conditions; not certain but possible depending on how events unfold.
Word Breakdown: Latin: contingere = to happen by chance; con- (together) + tangere (to touch); to happen to touch
Word family: contingency (n), contingently (adv)
Synonyms: dependent on, conditional, circumstantial, chance-dependent
Collocations: contingent on, contingent outcome, contingent success, highly contingent
Example: Success is more contingent than we like to believe — dependent on timing, geography, family circumstances, and historical moment in ways that effort and talent cannot fully control.
invisible
/ɪnˈvɪzɪbl/|in·vis·i·ble
adjective
Unable to be seen; not noticed or acknowledged; present but not apparent.
Word Breakdown: Latin: invisibilis = not visible; in- (not) + videre (to see)
Word family: invisibly (adv), invisibility (n)
Synonyms: unseen, unnoticed, hidden, unacknowledged
Collocations: invisible advantage, invisible barrier, made invisible, remain invisible
Example: The advantages of a stable home, well-resourced schools, and professional networks are often invisible to those who benefit from them — precisely because they have never had to notice their absence.
circumstantial
/ˌsɜːkəmˈstænʃl/|cir·cum·stan·tial
adjective
Relating to circumstances or conditions; determined by the particular situation rather than by inherent qualities.
Word Breakdown: Latin: circumstantia = surrounding condition; circum- (around) + stare (to stand)
Word family: circumstantially (adv)
Synonyms: situational, contextual, conditional, context-dependent
Collocations: circumstantial advantage, circumstantial factor, circumstantial explanation, highly circumstantial
Example: Much of what looks like individual merit is actually circumstantial — the product of a particular moment, place, and context that has nothing to do with inherent ability.
meritocratic
/ˌmerɪtəˈkrætɪk/|mer·i·to·crat·ic
adjective
Based on the principle that advancement should depend on talent and effort rather than birth, connections, or luck.
Word Breakdown: Latin: meritum = earned + Greek: kratos = power; meritocracy = rule by merit; -ic = adjective suffix
Word family: meritocracy (n), meritocrat (n)
Synonyms: based on merit, talent-based, achievement-based
Collocations: meritocratic ideal, meritocratic system, genuinely meritocratic, meritocratic assumptions
Example: We tell ourselves that society is meritocratic — that those who succeed did so because of talent and effort — but the research on luck and timing complicates this comfortable story.
Technical Terms
Matthew effect
/ˈmæθjuː ɪˈfɛkt/|Mat·thew ef·fect
noun phrase
the tendency for early advantages to compound into larger later advantages
Synonyms: cumulative advantage, preferential attachment, success-breeds-success effect
Collocations: Matthew effect in education, Matthew effect amplifies, Matthew effect explains inequality
Example: The Matthew effect — named from the gospel verse about the rich getting richer — describes how early advantages in reading, income, or reputation generate further advantages, so that initial differences compound into large disparities over time.
counterfactual
/ˌkaʊntəˈfæktʃuəl/|coun·ter·fac·tu·al
noun / adjective
what would have happened under different conditions
Synonyms: hypothetical alternative, what-if scenario, alternative history
Collocations: construct a counterfactual, counterfactual reasoning, counterfactual world
Example: The counterfactual question — what would have happened to an equally talented person who lacked the early break — is the one that survivorship bias makes almost impossible to ask, let alone answer.
attribution bias
/ˌætrɪˈbjuːʃ(ə)n ˈbaɪəs/|at·trib·u·tion bi·as
noun phrase
the tendency to explain one's own success through ability and failure through circumstance
Synonyms: attributional error, causal misattribution, dispositional bias
Collocations: attribution bias distorts, overcome attribution bias, attribution bias in success narratives
Example: Attribution bias leads observers to attribute successful outcomes to talent and effort while underweighting luck — and the successful themselves are even more susceptible, because the role of circumstance is invisible from the inside.
base rate
/beɪs reɪt/|base rate
noun phrase
the background frequency of an outcome in a population
Synonyms: prior probability, background frequency, baseline rate
Collocations: ignore the base rate, base rate neglect, apply the base rate
Example: The base rate for startup success is far lower than the entrepreneurship curriculum implies — a discrepancy produced by survivorship bias ensuring that the failures are absent from the cases studied.
path dependence
/pɑːθ dɪˈpɛndəns/|path de·pend·ence
noun phrase
the influence of earlier events on later outcomes, constraining possibilities
Synonyms: history-dependence, lock-in effect, trajectory constraint
Collocations: path dependence explains, path dependence in technology, path dependence produces lock-in
Example: Path dependence describes how early decisions constrain later options — a technology, institution, or career that gains early traction becomes harder to replace not because it is optimal but because the switching costs accumulate with each additional commitment to the existing path.
Figurative Phrases
right place, right time
In a fortunate position at the moment when circumstances produce an unexpected opportunity; benefiting from a fortunate coincidence of location and timing that cannot be attributed entirely to personal merit or planning.
Etymology/Type: idiom; specific compressed meaning
Synonyms: fortunate circumstances, opportune moment, fortuitous timing
Example: Being in the right place at the right time is often described as luck, but the counterfactual question — how many equally talented people were in the wrong place at the same moment — is the one that survivorship bias makes invisible in success narratives.
pull yourself up by your bootstraps
To achieve success through one's own unaided effort, without assistance or inherited advantage; to improve one's situation entirely by the force of personal determination and work.
Etymology/Type: idiom; physically impossible
Synonyms: succeed through your own unaided effort, achieve through pure self-reliance, improve your situation without external help
Example: The myth of pulling yourself up by your bootstraps ignores the Matthew effect — early structural advantages compound over time in ways that make the late starter's task categorically harder, not merely incrementally so.
a lucky break
An unexpected event or circumstance that creates a significant advantage or opportunity; a piece of good fortune that arrives without having been earned, anticipated, or controllably sought.
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal break
Synonyms: an unexpected fortunate opportunity, a chance event that creates advantage, a piece of good fortune
Example: A lucky break is rarely recognised as such at the time — and attribution bias ensures that those who receive one will, in retrospect, construct a narrative in which their own qualities explain the outcome more than the circumstance that made it possible.
self-made
Having achieved one's position, wealth, or success primarily through one's own effort and decisions rather than through inheritance, institutional advantage, or the help of others.
Etymology/Type: idiom; ignores inherited advantages
Synonyms: having achieved success through one's own efforts without external advantage, entirely self-reliant in one's rise, built from nothing by one's own work
Example: The self-made narrative is almost always a selective account — one that accurately records what the person did but silently omits the structural conditions, relationships, and timing that made those actions effective rather than futile.
catch a wave
To enter a field, industry, or endeavour at the moment when external conditions are rising in your favour; to benefit from a trend or movement that carries you forward independently of your individual qualities.
Etymology/Type: idiom from surfing
Synonyms: seize a favourable moment or trend, time an entry into a rising opportunity, benefit from a favourable external movement
Example: The founders who caught the wave of early internet adoption did not create the wave — the cohort effect gave them an opportunity that later entrants could not replicate however faithfully they copied the strategy.
by the grace of
Owing to the favour, fortunate intervention, or unearned generosity of someone or something outside oneself; not primarily through one's own merit, skill, or deliberate effort.
Etymology/Type: idiom with religious origin, now secular
Synonyms: through the favour or help of, owing to the benevolence or good fortune of, only because of
Example: Honest accounts of career success sometimes acknowledge that they succeeded by the grace of circumstances — a mentor who happened to notice them, a market that happened to need exactly what they built — rather than only by personal merit.
Confusing Words
attribute vs attribution
These related words serve different grammatical functions — one a verb describing the act of assigning cause, the other a noun naming the process or result of that assignment.
- attribute (verb) — to assign a cause, origin, or responsibility to someone or something. To attribute success to talent is to identify talent as the cause. The verb describes the cognitive act of assigning causal responsibility.
- attribution (noun) — the process of explaining behaviour or outcomes by assigning causes; also the result of that process. Attribution bias is the systematic error in that process. Attribution theory studies how people explain what they observe.
If describing the act of assigning cause or credit, use attribute as a verb. If referring to the explanatory process or its product as a concept or object of study, use attribution.
contingent vs consequential
Both words describe something dependent on or following from something else, but they describe different kinds of dependency.
- contingent — dependent on something else; not certain, conditional on circumstances. A contingent outcome is one that might or might not occur depending on prior conditions. Success being contingent on timing means it depends on timing and would not have occurred otherwise.
- consequential — significant in its effects; having important consequences. A consequential decision is one that matters because of what flows from it. The word emphasises the weight and impact of outcomes rather than their conditionality.
If describing something that is conditional and depends on prior circumstances, use contingent. If describing something that is significant because of the important effects it produces, use consequential.
meritocratic vs meritorious
Both words relate to merit, but they describe different things — one a system, the other a quality of individual achievement.
- meritocratic — relating to a meritocracy; organised around the principle that advancement is determined by ability and effort rather than birth or connection. A meritocratic system distributes rewards based on measured performance. The word is descriptive of a social arrangement, not a moral quality.
- meritorious — deserving praise or reward; having genuine merit. A meritorious achievement is one that is genuinely praiseworthy on its own terms. The word applies to individual acts or works rather than to systems of organisation.
If describing a system or principle that allocates rewards based on measured ability and effort, use meritocratic. If describing an individual act or achievement as genuinely praiseworthy and deserving of recognition, use meritorious.
- 选择某一选项会使整个页面刷新。
- 在新窗口中打开。