Ness Labs: What are Your Curiosity Attracors? 🌀


Edition #214 – February 8th, 2024
A newsletter by Anne-Laure Le Cunff

Hello friends,
I’m beyond excited about this edition. A few weeks ago, I announced that I was giving away $3,400 to celebrate my 34th birthday. I encouraged people to submit proposals for a personal experiment they wanted to run that could have a meaningful impact on their lives.
Today, I’m done reviewing all the applications and I can finally announce the winners 🎉
With more than 100 applications, it was a very difficult decision to make. I read and re-read every single application multiple times and was blown away by the quality and diversity of ideas. I’m grateful to have learned so much from everyone who applied.
Which brings me to the topic of today’s essay: something I call curiosity attractors. I’d love to hear what yours are, so please hit reply when you’re done reading and let me know.
Enjoy this week’s edition!
Anne-Laure.

  🛠️ TOOL OF THE WEEK  

This edition is brought to you by Elephas, a personal AI writing assistant for Macbook, iPhone, and iPad. Ayush and Kamban are on a mission to help users seamlessly distill and express the best ideas from all their knowledge. In this interview, we talked about the future of human creativity, how to get creatively unstuck with AI, and much more.

Curiosity Attractors

We all have those recurring fascinations we just can’t seem to shake. You know the ones — those diffuse obsessions and latent creative projects that linger in the back of your mind, calling to you even when you try your best to ignore them.

Though you may not realize it, these ‘curiosity attractors’ often reveal deeper truths about who you are and what is most meaningful to you, offering insights into your past experiences and current creative drive, and even glimpses into potential career paths you may want to explore.

A multifaceted form of curiosity

Curiosity is a complex psychological phenomenon with multiple facets. There are many types of curiosity (and researchers are still arguing about how many types and how to define them) but three types are most relevant to curiosity attractors: epistemic curiosity, empathic curiosity, and diversive curiosity.

• Epistemic curiosity refers to your desire to learn about the world and resolve gaps in your understanding. It motivates you to read non-fiction books, conduct research, or enroll in classes to master new skills. It drives your lifelong quest to expand your knowledge and circle of competence. When you feel confused by a concept, epistemic curiosity kicks in and compels you to dig deeper to fill in the gaps and reconcile any contradictions.

• Empathic curiosity relates to your interest in connecting with others, understanding their perspectives and experiences. It’s what makes you ask questions to understand how friends think and feel, get to know strangers, or consume media to gain insight into other ways of life. We have an innate drive to feel part of something bigger than ourselves, and empathic curiosity stems from our deeply human need to form interpersonal connections and bond with others.

• Diversive curiosity is that fleeting urge you sometimes feel to explore something new just for the sake of novelty, with no clear goal in mind. Diversive curiosity is behind our tendency to compulsively check our feeds for updates, fall into Wikipedia rabbit holes, try new TV shows, or say “ok, one last chapter and then I’ll go to bed!” when reading an addictive novel. This form of curiosity provides a momentary thrill through novelty that doesn’t require a deeper purpose.

Curiosity attractors are like mental tugs-of-war that tap into all three types of curiosity. We feel pulled to certain concepts because of a desire to understand the world (epistemic curiosity) and bond with others who share our interests (empathic curiosity). There’s also excitement just from the novelty of the topic (diversive curiosity).

While the diversive component may be short-lived, epistemic and empathic curiosity have staying power. You return to these ideas again and again because they speak to a deep need for knowledge and connection. Curiosity attractors reveal what you care most about and cannot resist exploring.

But what is it that compels us to revisit specific ideas, topics, and creative projects time and again, and not others that seem equally interesting on paper?

The birth of curiosity attractors

Some concepts stick in our minds, evolving into curiosity attractors that keep on pulling on our attention while others fade away. There seems to be three key factors that give birth to curiosity attractors.

The first is positive early experiences. When parents and teachers encourage your enthusiasm for a subject in childhood, it sticks with you. You associate those topics with feelings like joy, pride and competence. Research suggests that these emotional imprints stay with you. For instance, kids praised for scientific curiosity often grow into adults who gravitate toward the sciences.

Curiosity attractors also often intersect with parts of your identity. We go back to questions that fit with our personal values and worldviews. If environmental activism matters to someone, they will revisit related issues like climate change. A philosopher passionate about ethics may often go back to grappling with moral questions.

Finally, the sheer enjoyment of a good intellectual challenge keeps certain subject matter perpetually engaging, and we are drawn to ideas with just the right level of complexity. Psychologists call this need for cognition, which is usually triggered by ideas complex enough to highlight gaps in our knowledge but not so complex as to feel incomprehensible. Curiosity attractors tend to hit this sweet spot.

Ultimately, your curiosity attractors offer insight into who you are. They capture your past experiences, your current values, and signal your untapped potential. They provide a blueprint of your inner world waiting to be brought to life.

How to explore your curiosity attractors

Your curiosity attractors are like a compass pointing to your creative true north. Tuning into these mental magnets and paying attention to where they pull your imagination can reveal hidden pathways to creativity and self-discovery.

What’s the one idea that lives rent-free in the back of your mind? Is there a creative project you keep mentioning you’ll work on one day? A question you keep on coming back to?

Start by paying attention to what naturally draws your attention during everyday life. A great way to do that is to practice self-anthropology and capture field notes for 24 hours. Are you always attracted to certain topics when reading articles, talking to friends, or listening to podcasts? Everytime you notice one of these, jot it down. Over time, patterns will emerge that will help you identify your curiosity attractors.

Next, translate these insights into action. Start small and see where your curiosity leads you. This could be a simple side project, hosting some conversations about this topic, or even just writing more about it on social media.

See if exploring this curiosity attractor sparks bigger aspirations for the future — perhaps even suggesting a potential career change, whether it’s expanding the scope of your current role or pivoting to a different path entirely.

Sometimes, curiosity attractors center around life’s great mysteries — the origins of human consciousness, the size of the cosmos, the meaning of it all. Although these may be unsolvable, the very act of wondering connects you to fellow curious minds across the ages grappling with the same big questions. Those curiosity attractors help you step into a collective human experience much larger than yourself. And that’s worth exploring.

⚡️ Brain Picks

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🤝 Brain Trust

If you enjoy the newsletter, you'll love our community of curious minds who grow together through interactive workshops and safe discussion spaces. Here is what we have planned next week:

• How can you harness your emotions? There is a strong relationship between emotions and self-expression. Join Gosia for a creative hour session on Monday to explore tools and strategies to better connect to your emotions.
What's in your antilibrary? Come discuss with Maame your unread books and what they mean about your dreams, your interests, and maybe even your future.
• Want to make progress on your project? Tackle the tasks you've been putting off while enjoying the company of fellow community members. Lukas and Javier are hosting coworking sessions on Mondays and Thursdays, covering all timezones.
• Need to make space for self-reflection? Achieve more clarity over your progress and your priorities by conduct your weekly review using the Plus Minus Next method in a guided session hosted by Haikal on Sunday.

All of these and future events are included in the price of the annual membership ($49), as well as access to the recordings of all our previous sessions and past cohort-based courses.

🌊 Brain Waves

Have a friend who wants to make the most of their mind? Send them the newsletter using your unique referral link below and unlock Reflective Minds, a database of good questions from great thinkers and creators.

Until next week, take care!
Anne-Laure.

P.S. Do you enjoy writing? I shared a simple guide to my writing process.

Ness Labs by Anne-Laure Le Cunff

A weekly newsletter with science-based insights on creativity, mindful productivity, better thinking and lifelong learning.

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