The Importance Of Success In Life

1278 Words3 Pages

Imagine growing up and knowing that your life is full of success. Given the opportunity to be the person that would be impossible to be. Knowing that the month we were born in and the family we came from was the key to everything. Sounds perfect more like social predestination. Determining if the person is set for failure or for greatness. Allowing other to investigate whether our cultural heritage and time play a significant role in the person we become. Kakutani argues that Gladwell theory is based on social predestination and uses flimsy selection of colorful anecdotes and stories. Gladwell does not use evidence to support his claim because his evidence relies on inference and prediction rather than valuable facts. In the book review of Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell, “It’s True: Success Succeeds, and …show more content…

He writes “almost none of the genius children from the lowest social and economic class ended up making a name for themselves” (Gladwell 112). Conveying that even though these impoverish children are geniuses they are likely to be failures and not succeed in life. On the other hand, many low income children have proven to be successful because they show the determination and want to prove those people like Gladwell that they are possible to do anything they want. Gladwell only targets a specific group rather than many other people who have proven to make a name for themselves and come from impoverish backgrounds. Making a name for yourself does not involve the background of the person or whether they have money. It should be based on the person and their desire to be someone important. Even though, Gladwell believes that are social class and background is very valuable to our social predestination, we can argue that being genius and wealthy will only bring success and make a name for

Open Document