If you try to type faster than you're able to of course you're going to make errors and you will have to go back and correct them which will take more time, so it will take longer to type what you're typing if you try to type faster than you're able to but that's not the point.When I try to type faster, I make more errors.
I never said anything about anybody hurrying anybody else. The Tae Kwon Do school that I mentioned in my original post that had the Black Belt Club, you didn't have to be in the club if you didn't want to. Not all students were in the club. It would be up to you as a student if you wanted to be in the club or not so nobody was hurrying anybody.Moral of the story: Don't hurry people. They'll make (more) mistakes.
I never said it wasn't but that's not the point.Hence, patience is a virtue.
So therefore, getting something done sooner doesn't mean you're less patient, on the contrary it can mean you're more patient.
In short, sooner does not mean impatient and taking longer does not mean more patient. — HardWorker
I'd say patience, its definition, has a clear (enough) temporal specification viz. waiting which is synonymous with prolongation of duration. — Agent Smith
Someone who is not carrying out the task themselves, but relying on someone else, is unable to control how this person distributes their effort and attention over time. When more of our own attention and effort is allocated to a task, we expect it to happen sooner. Patience in this instance is recognising that allocating more of our own effort or attention to someone else’s task has no bearing on the time it takes them. It’s about their attention and their effort - which we detract from the task at hand when we ask: ‘Are we there yet?’ ‘What’s taking so long?’ — Possibility
Yeah, a gap in the causal chain! — Agent Smith
So therefore, getting something done sooner doesn't mean you're less patient, on the contrary it can mean you're more patient — HardWorker
Maybe if they put in extra hours every week in their training they'll get it done in less then 8 years.Person: I want to be a surgeon but I think I'm too old to start. I'm 25.
Friend: Well, you still have time.
Person: But it takes eight years. By the time I've done the training I'll be 33!
Friend: True. And if you don't train to be a surgeon, how old will you be then?
Maybe if they put in extra hours every week in their training they'll get it done in less then 8 years. — HardWorker
I've just been occupied with other stuff so I haven't been back to the forum for awhile.It took you five months to answer @Cuthbert :eyes: you are a real patient person indeed.
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