Not really the issue in this discussion, which is about the negative effects of a filtering system that excludes a certain small but highly valuable population.
Can you give me examples of people who were not conscientious and were nonetheless able to complete large, multi-step projects?
As I’ve suggested earlier, EY is a pretty good example of the type of personality I have in mind.
Not really the issue in this discussion, which is about the negative effects of a filtering system that excludes a certain small but highly valuable population.
Fair enough. The highly valuable ‘outliers’ are likely going to be different enough from me that I’ll have trouble mapping and comparing my traits onto theirs, which makes that kind of comparison not very useful.
EY is a pretty good example of the type of personality I have in mind.
You may know better than me, but as far as I can tell, EY does have the ability to coax himself into working productively on projects that aren’t necessarily a lot of fun all the time. He just won’t do it for any goal that that he doesn’t consider important. He strikes me more as someone who dislikes authority figures and cares less about the typical social reinforcement that comes of achieving more “conventional” goals, like going to university.
Not really the issue in this discussion, which is about the negative effects of a filtering system that excludes a certain small but highly valuable population.
As I’ve suggested earlier, EY is a pretty good example of the type of personality I have in mind.
Fair enough. The highly valuable ‘outliers’ are likely going to be different enough from me that I’ll have trouble mapping and comparing my traits onto theirs, which makes that kind of comparison not very useful.
You may know better than me, but as far as I can tell, EY does have the ability to coax himself into working productively on projects that aren’t necessarily a lot of fun all the time. He just won’t do it for any goal that that he doesn’t consider important. He strikes me more as someone who dislikes authority figures and cares less about the typical social reinforcement that comes of achieving more “conventional” goals, like going to university.
Yes, exactly. This is exactly the kind of story that such folks will tell about themselves.
Whereas, by contrast, the “conscientious” have enough willpower resources to spare for tasks that others consider “important” for them to do, as well.