Interesting and useful post, but I’m not sure I agree with the analogy to learned helplessness or using the word “learned” at all. The state you are describing seems to vary greatly between individuals (for contrast, I know many people who believe they can do or know almost anything correctly) and probably correlates to such things as intelligence, openness, risk-tolerance, etc. What makes you think this “blankness” is learned?
We (and by ‘we’ I mean the general American public) learn it in school, fairly early on. Children who question, explore, experiment, and tinker are often chastised for “jumping ahead” or “not paying attention” or “being disruptive” or a half-dozen other complaints made by harried or exhausted teachers, or fearful parents.
Children are not often (anymore) encouraged to simply try things out to see if they work. In school they’re not really encouraged to explore, but instead to stay with the group. At home, they’re often inhibited from tinkering with pretty much anything. “You might break it!” is a pretty common parental reaction to a child tinkering with anything remotely mechanical.
I’m not sure that’s what the author specifically had in mind, when calling this behavior “learned”, but it’s certainly something I’ve seen fairly often.
Interesting and useful post, but I’m not sure I agree with the analogy to learned helplessness or using the word “learned” at all. The state you are describing seems to vary greatly between individuals (for contrast, I know many people who believe they can do or know almost anything correctly) and probably correlates to such things as intelligence, openness, risk-tolerance, etc. What makes you think this “blankness” is learned?
We (and by ‘we’ I mean the general American public) learn it in school, fairly early on. Children who question, explore, experiment, and tinker are often chastised for “jumping ahead” or “not paying attention” or “being disruptive” or a half-dozen other complaints made by harried or exhausted teachers, or fearful parents.
Children are not often (anymore) encouraged to simply try things out to see if they work. In school they’re not really encouraged to explore, but instead to stay with the group. At home, they’re often inhibited from tinkering with pretty much anything. “You might break it!” is a pretty common parental reaction to a child tinkering with anything remotely mechanical.
I’m not sure that’s what the author specifically had in mind, when calling this behavior “learned”, but it’s certainly something I’ve seen fairly often.