Why do we need to study?

About 4,000 years ago, someone accidentally first combined tin with copper, producing bronze for the first time.

Bronze was the most revolutionary invention of the time. It quickly became the key advantage in warfare.

With bronze, the Egyptian Pharaoh was unbeatable.

Let’s go back in history to answer your question:

Why is studying so important in life?

The only way to stop the Egyptian Army was with another Bronze equipped army.

As other armies armed themselves with bronze weapons, the high demand of tin and copper brought scarcity of the elements.

With the desperate need to defend themselves from others, innovation eventually brought the Iron Age.

Forging iron became the most important skill of the era, but it wasn’t easy. To raise the metal to extreme temperatures, heat was only accomplished by pushing air into charcoal.

This was a manufacturing secret!

For decades, iron was the key competitive advantage. Even the most powerful Bronze Age armies stood no chance to win when confronted to soldiers equipped with lighter and much stronger iron weapons.

These were the first disruptive technologies. Disruption brings massive shifts in power. As a result empires rose and others fell.

Knowledge became the most valuable asset back in the Iron Age.

New and more powerful technologies were the key differentiators.

The more our world advances, the more critical knowledge becomes.

Today we are in the Digital Age. There are major shifts of power happening in every industry around the world.

So, why is studying so important in life? This is how critical it is:

* In the Agrarian Age, wealth originated from nature.

* In the Industrial Age, wealth originated from machines.

* In the Digital Age, wealth originates from information and knowledge.

 

Picture Credit : Google