Moderator: Soñadora
Olaf Hart wrote:I know you guys are all asleep at the moment, but an old post of Bob's has flushed Steve Dashew out on the Uglyboat thread on CA.
SloopJonB wrote:Interesting stuff - I always got a similar vibe from Dashew as we get from Brent Swain about HIS boats. I guess the messiah's are all pretty similar, just like they are in religions.
I instinctively distrust anyone who has found "The Answer" or "The True Way" - in ANY field.
bob perry wrote:Nah, I won't play with him. He'll have to play with himself which I suspect he is adept at.
bob perry wrote:I kind of assume I have adults around me who can think for themselves. I'll throw out ideas but I don't care of you buy them or not. Sometimes an idea has to gestate a while in some peolple. I'm kind of like that because I'm slow.
Olaf Hart wrote:Beau, there is a real problem here in Oz with many Gen X / Gen Y who use what I call "magical thinking"
Our schools emphasised humanities, not maths and science, so there is no respect for evidence or scientific method.
They were taught by school and by marketing that if you want something to be true, then it will be true.
If it doesnt work out, you just want harder, so there is no capacity to learn.
Its a real PITA if you are a clinician, and very difficult if you are trying to teach them as adults.
Olaf Hart wrote:Beau, there is a real problem here in Oz with many Gen X / Gen Y who use what I call "magical thinking"
Our schools emphasised humanities, not maths and science, so there is no respect for evidence or scientific method.
They were taught by school and by marketing that if you want something to be true, then it will be true.
If it doesnt work out, you just want harder, so there is no capacity to learn.
Its a real PITA if you are a clinician, and very difficult if you are trying to teach them as adults.
BeauV wrote:I find that utterly astounding! I've spent my life as an engineer and an investor, and the humanities were entertaining but basically useless to me in my life, with the exception of teaching me enough about human nature to lead folks.
JoeP wrote:BeauV wrote:I find that utterly astounding! I've spent my life as an engineer and an investor, and the humanities were entertaining but basically useless to me in my life, with the exception of teaching me enough about human nature to lead folks.
I think the answer lies in balance between the humanities and science. All science degrees should have more humanities and humanities degrees need more science. It would be a sad world if it rotated around just numbers or just the arts.
And Bob, you are slow...like a fox.
kdh wrote:As I gained experience professionally I decided to do something I liked doing, was morally reasonable, and was lucrative, in that order.
To me, a correlation between technical skills and wealth creation is a bit west coast, Beau. I think the basic requirement is a skill that few possess, like shooting baskets or picking stocks effectively, for example.