The_Walrus wrote:
Explain someone like Brian Cox? Could have been a professional musician, gave it up to be a scientist, very socially capable and charming, a talented writer, a successful media career... On the other hand, you have many people with few skills at all.
Aside from physically and cognitively handicapped people, we're all within a very close range as far as genetics-- we share 99% of the same genetics as a few other primates, we're not all that wildly different on a genetic level. More than anything the environment we inhabit determines what our skills will be. If you grew up around a lot of musicians you're probably going to be a pretty good musician when you get older, if you grew up around bankers you'll have a high likely hood of getting into banking. It's not that those abilities are necessarily innate it's that you've been influenced by them from an early age and so they become natural by the time you're older and therefore more likely to lead to success.
Take someone like Mozart who was playing piano at age five and composing by age 12. He only did those things because his father, a professional musician himself, started teaching those skills when Mozart was just 3 years old. Imagine how good you would play piano if instead of learning to walk you were taught piano instead, it would become instinct just like walking is for everyone else. Likewise, say Mozart was put up for adoption and ended up in a baker's household, he might have never even had a chance to play an instrument.
It's just like an RPG, if you come out of the womb as a bard you're gonna have a few stats boosted in a few bard related areas, but those are just starter points-- you still have to level up (practice) to fill out your talent sheet (skills) and the more time you invest in certain talent points the better they get.