I suspect that very few extroverts would be members of a philosophy forum — Galuchat
Most cashiers I encounter don't say much that isn't related to the utility of the transaction. A few of them are somewhat dour with an inverted Mona Lisa's smile.
I found UK cashiers seemingly more gloomy and disinterested than USA cashiers from my locality.
Hair cutting folks are the small talk monsters. — Nils Loc
It makes sense to me that happiness is the evolved chemical reward for doing things beneficial to survival and suffering is the punishment. — MonfortS26
I think we are all too inclined to be village worthies, and so to learn nothing and build nothing. — unenlightened
What i think is that the inevitable fear of death which to them, preoccupied with it as they are, is so scary that they convince themselves, with the power of the group, that death does not hold a negative connotation. The highest level of death denial makes a full circle to come back to the full embrace of it. — eddiedean
I'm not sure at all how to phrase this, but: what is the origin of the spiritual sense of beauty?
I understand the evolutionary benefits of finding symmetrical faces and strong colors aesthetically pleasing, but what is the origin of the kind of beauty that has a non material trigger?
How come you may experience a "spiritual" kind of beauty, for example, when listening to beautiful music, reading something beautiful, or just being with friends & family?
It would be simple enough if it were just an ordinary survival mechanism, but people do find tragic movies and depressing music beautiful as well, so I can't see how that makes sense. — Daniel Sjöstedt
So, you're an enrolled student? You're writing academic work for assessment in a degree or non-degree class? If so, would you consider enrolling in history? That would provide an opportunity for feedback, assessment and guidance. — Wayfarer
To learn and create something new takes lots of patience. I am still practicing drawing ovals as I learn how to draw. It is only frustrating or empty if I've expects too much in one lifetime. Small steps are fine and require a lot less energy. — Rich
Introvert/extrovert are just different things to do in life. It was interesting for me to try out being an extrovert, but it was always me. I was funny and enjoyed the laughter. Just an experiment. — Rich
They are personality traits actually. "They" say extroverts are happier than introverts, and that introverts often want to be more extrovert if only they knew how. They also say that introverts can be trained to be more extrovert. "They" are psychologists who have performed experiments etc. I think they may be right, in moderation. — Jake Tarragon
There are many ways to describe it I guess. One way might be that it is more comfortable being introverted or extraverted. And it does take a lot of effort to act otherwise. The soul runs deep like a lake, and only so much on the surface can probably change in one lifetime. It's just something sometime may try to change if one wishes. I was quite introverted until college when I decided I would try to change a bit. — Rich
The job of cashier requires that you accept people's money for the good you're selling and to exchange niceties in order to have them return and buy other things. It's no more fake that you act like a guy who rings people up than it is that you act like someone who cares about your customers' day. You're just doing a job. — Hanover
You're being paid to act like a cashier. Do that. — Hanover
Insisting upon being yourself isn't always the best way to get along with others. — Hanover
Obviously we see why there would be an intolerance for shyness in the service industry. Extroverted traits and pro social skills will always be preferred in these settings. — Nils Loc
think conversation is a social skill and that you can down regulate the fear response that gets in the way with practice. Just because it feels fake now doesn't mean it will always feel fake. — Nils Loc
Why isn't all the anonymous conversation generated here not an example of extroversion? Do your posts feel phony to you? — Nils Loc
Sounds conspiracy-ish, over thought and baseless. The people behind that movement are intelligent enough to neither come up with such an agenda nor to not believe in intelligent design. — BlueBanana
What should the focus of a government be? How much power should it have? — MonfortS26
Cavacava — Cavacava
And if there is interiority, then that is where consciousness resides. You can’t see it, but it’s real. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Not only invisible, but it's completely unnecessary (and therefore unparsimonious) for explaining our experience.
Real? So you imagine....and overactive imagination is what we're talking about here.
For example, you and I are attempting to reach mutual understanding right now. And we say, aha, I understand what you’re saying. But you can’t point to that understanding. Where does it exist? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
In your imagination, if you're referring to some imaginary Mind entity separate from the body.
The animal is unitary, and needn't be unparsimoniously divided into body and mind. — Michael Ossipoff
It's not up to me, the town planned to remove the statue....these thugs came in and created holy hell. I don't see any statues of Hitler up in Germany. — Cavacava
So, are you in favor of removal of Robert E Lee's statue or are you suggesting that it be archived in some manner? — Cavacava
How to treat the past — Bitter Crank
Reparations in some form or the other are needed if we want to see subsequent generations to become freed from the bigotry that is still so ingrained in our culture. Removal of the statues of historic oppressors is only one small step. — Cavacava
Education standards in middle and high school should require competence in "general education". The subjects of "general education" include (minimum)
American history (2 years)
World history -- particularly western civilization (1 year, minimum)
World literature and composition (2 years)
American literature and composition (2 years)
British literature and composition (1 year)
General Science (2 years, minimum)
biology (2 years, minimum)
geography (2 years, minimum)
a foreign language (2 years, minimum)
personal finance (1 year)
Less general education includes:
Additional classes in math and science (algebra, geometry, etc.; chemistry, physics, etc.)
vocational classes (focused on practical tasks)
Obviously, subjects taught in 7th grade will be have a less complex presentation than the same subjects taught in the 11th or 12th grade. Geography needs to be included in elementary school to present the general kinds of information--a good grasp of the size and organization of the United States (or Europe for British and European students).
Maybe this seems old fashioned. — Bitter Crank
At least when I was in high school (back in the carboniferous period) there was little to no instruction on ordinary economic life. Geography is the best field to cover economic life. Where do goods come from? How are they distributed? What does location, location, location mean? How are seaports, canals, rivers, railroads, highways, airports... work together? How is it that a fragile tropical fruit (the banana) is everybody's favorite, and cheap? Why aren't the apples in the store grown locally? (A lot of it is G E O G R A P H Y.) — Bitter Crank
But eventually it comes down to a coin toss?... — praxis
So etc. could be referring to any geographical element? Okay... — praxis
Yup, them there country folk are real morons. — praxis
Well, Thorongil, this is the sum and substance of school for a good share of the population. I've said elsewhere that maybe 20% of students get a good to excellent education. It isn't an accident. The 20% get good education because their parents move into good school districts, or send their children to good private schools. 20% of the school population actually have a bright future. The other 80%, not so much.
Why doesn't everybody get a good to excellent education, when the benefits are so obvious? Because, in the big world of real politic many students are going to be economically irrelevant to a large extent and it just doesn't matter whether they know where Iowa, France, or New Zealand is. It doesn't matter whether they know shit from shinola. It doesn't matter if they know anything at all.
Irrelevant, useless people is what results when economies are organized only to maximize profit for stockholders. Production requiring low skills is transferred to the lowest wage countries. Some goods require lots of skilled workers, large overhead, and investment, but those industries don't employ huge numbers of people.
Irrelevant, useless people will still eat and buy stuff, so they have a function after all, but advertising on television or the internet can take care of teaching them what kind of junk they should buy. — Bitter Crank
Intuitively, the location of cities primarily developed around major ports or other hubs of transportation... — praxis
Isn't the location of soils and water geology?... — praxis
Given the categorical disparity between cities and soil & water, I'm not sure what etc. may be referring to... — praxis
I not sure why anyone would think "places" are in vacuums that don't affect each other. Are these places very far apart? — praxis
The ugly truth is that we have the time and resources to do this now, but we still don't do it. Don't expect that some fairy tail AI will make this possible. — praxis
In what way does my statement above remind you of interiority concept? From what I've read, his concept revolves around transcending the rational world and entering a divine one. Maybe I'm reading the wrong book, but that's what I'm getting so far. — Anonymys
The Lutheran insight that work is a central human act remains:
…the works of monks and priests, however holy and arduous they may be, do not differ one whit in the sight of God from the works of the rustic laborer in the field or the woman going about her household tasks…all works are measured before God by faith alone.
Martin Luther
It doesn't matter whether the work is domestic duties, civic duties, or wage-earning employment: work is holy.
If human labor is replaced by entirely mechanical production, then it will be a life-and-death matter to redefine the meaning and value of ordinary people, and ordinary work. Without vocation, (however that is defined) Homo Operatur will be hard pressed to fill his years with meaning, or even survive. — Bitter Crank
When I stated " Some may call it identity, others may call it your inner being." I was simply saying that your identity is something that is there when others are not, who you truely are, or, your inner self. Not just how you appear to be. — Anonymys
I hate to break it to you, but Kyrie Irving is not a reliable source on such matters. (Neither is he a reliable Cavalier, the bastard.) — Thorongil
A mix of apathy on the part of students and poor teaching. — Thorongil
They might do not know "push and pull factors" as one of the geographer's theoretical devices, but they know it from history and from everyday practice. Most of us live in places which either produce or accept immigrants (or both), so we're aware, to a certain extent, of push and pull factors... — Πετροκότσυφας
We might not be able to theorise on an abstract level about such issues, but most, when it comes to our built environments, are aware of practical considerations such as the existence of green spaces, open spaces, water sources, dumpsites etc. — Πετροκότσυφας
Now, of course, most of our understanding regarding such topics is usually quite simplistic, but that's more or less expected. — Πετροκότσυφας
Also, I think that it's not terribly surprising that most people do not know what GIS is. Most of us are not big in electromagnetism either, despite the fact that we can turn the radio on. Specialisation comes with a cost. — Πετροκότσυφας
Expect that consumer lifestyle to dominate even more if AI takes over a lot of the work we do. — WISDOMfromPO-MO