The story of a legendary lawyer becomes a case study in timing. The question is not “Why was he so gifted?” but “What doors were open for someone like him, at that moment in history?”
First, background can be an advantage when it places you near an emerging niche. Exclusion from old prestige tracks can push you into work that later becomes central, while others stay loyal to fading status.
Second, cohorts matter. Being born in the right years can align your adulthood with a boom—new industries, new laws, new markets—when opportunity outruns the supply of trained people.
Third, success needs both practice and permission: enormous hours of work, plus a setting that lets you do that work early. Talent without access stays hypothetical. Outliers are built at intersections—of family, era, geography, and institutions—not in isolation.