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    Anthony Curtis Adler
    Anthony Curtis Adler, works at Yonsei University


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  2. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to How can you tell if someone is just undisciplined and lacks focus or is just a modern day Renaissance Man/Woman? - Quora



    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, Educator ESL and Western business knowledge
    Presumably there are people who like to be very diversified in their interests, so these could be termed modern day renaissance people. I’m not sure why we have to go around labeling them one way or another. Is there a benefit to this? It will not change the inner scope of a person either way.
    In any case, an undisciplined person is just someone who cannot learn from their experiences, whereas a disciplined person gains a lot of knowledge and growth even from their most negative experiences. Supposing you could look directly into the minds of each sort of person, you would see very different sorts of organic processes taking place, but unfortunately you, as an outsider cannot do this. What may look like disarray to you might just be elements of experience that have not yet been incorporated into some useful whole by the creative and generative mind. By contrast, an undisciplined mind will abandon projects and not return to them with renewed knowledge and vigor, over time.
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  3. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to What is psychology like in Japan? - Quora



    This question previously had details. They are now in a comment.
    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, PhD African Literature & Psychology, The University of Western Australia (2010)
    The Japanese are very stoical, and this is similar to the English, who are also this way inclined. The psychology of Japan is also very much influenced by the nature religion of Shintoism and by Buddhism. There is a desire to be one with nature in many ways, or at least to respect its processes. In a way, Japanese are like the Borg, with a hive mind. People operate not for individual advantage, but for the common good. They don’t need you to join them in that, however, unlike the Borg. They are very good at adapting to other cultures, and fitting in, although they do not particularly welcome strangers to their homeland, unless there are economic incentives for doing so. Most Japanese have a very dry sense of humor when it comes to acknowledging how much they sacrifice to meet their standards of conformity. The Japanese laugh at themselves, rather than making fun of strangers.
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  4. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to Is it true that people with narcissistic personalities hate change? - Quora



    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, Educator ESL and Western business knowledge
    Superficial change, they like. But then they are superficial people. They can’t be swept away by a great passion, or find energy to reinvigorate and renew their lives. They deeply do not believe in change on the inside. That is why, as a rule, when they select a victim, they base their views about that victim on the supposition that whatever hurdles or hiccups that victim experienced would define that victim’s personality for life. They can’t see difficulties as something in life that enables us to grow. Instead they see those difficulties as defining a deficiency in the personality, which must be perfect to survive. It’s a very weird world view.
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  5. (1) Jennifer Armstrong's answer to I think I was misdiagnosed as bipolar by my psychiatrist, since there was information I forgot to mention. Is it wrong to question him at my next appointment? - Quora



    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, PhD African Literature & Psychology, The University of Western Australia (2010)
    When I have had a sense that there was some information that was missing in the mind of a therapist, it is usually because they are responding in a way that seems to bypass my own rational processes. If we are to assume that the therapist is basing a diagnosis on a picture of you they have developed in their mind, then certainly they need to be furnished with the missing parts of the puzzle, or previously and inadvertently excluded information. Otherwise, their picture of you doesn’t work.
    On the other hand, I am not sure that all therapists or mental health professionals really do use a cognitive style to come up with a diagnosis — so maybe, then, there are no parts of a puzzle that are missing, as such, from the mind of the therapist. Maybe the therapist wasn’t even trying to build an image of you by using a puzzle. It could be they are just looking at symptomology. This could be the source of the problem, if there is one. In the same way as victims of narcissists can exhibit all sorts of pathological characteristics and yet not be narcissists themselves, one might be exhibiting qualities that come from the impact of the environment one is currently experiencing (or has previously experienced, if there are still some unresolved emotional issues). In that case, the symptoms are not part of one’s essential character, but relate to what is going on in the environment. When mental health professionals do not look closely enough at what is going on, but merely tick the boxes for a list of symptoms, they will misdiagnose. The question is whether they would be prepared to change their diagnosis if you gave them more information, supposing they did not employ a cognitive style to arrive at your initial diagnosis in any case.
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  6. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to Is it better for politicians to tell the ugly truth or tell beautiful lies? - Quora



    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, Educator ESL and Western business knowledge
    Every element of reality has components to it that are both ugly truth and beautiful lies. Such is the human condition. Politicians will in turn focus on ugly truths when they are considering their opponents, and on beautiful lies when they are considering their own side of politics.
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  7. What is Freud's most interesting and controversial theory? - Quora



    He wrote: “A religion, even if it calls itself a religion of love, must be hard and unloving to those who do not belong to it."
    There were no experimental studies proving that Freud’s methods worked better than the ones used by other psychiatrists at the time and soon he became less and less popular. This was a dramatic experience for Freud and he was convinced that his adversaries were mentally ill. He wrote to his friend Carl Jung that he was treating his reluctant colleagues the same way as he treated his patients.
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  8. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to What would you say to someone who thinks all morals are subjective/relative? - Quora



    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, Educator ESL and Western business knowledge
    I see nothing wrong with considering all morals to be relative or to have a subjective component. That is just how things have to be if we are humans. It is a trivial truth about how humans operate and navigate their way through the world. Try, if you will to picture how people thought about morality in 19th Century Europe, compared to how we think about things now. Isn’t there a relativity there, simply on the basis that these are not the same ways of thinking about most things? I think when we lose touch with knowledge about history, we start to imagine that changes do not really occur.
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  9. Jennifer Armstrong's answer to Do philosophers use deep 'abstract' thinking skills similar to mathematicians? - Quora



    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, Educator ESL and Western business knowledge
    Analytical philosophy is much closer to mathematics and computer science than Continental Philosophy is. I am trained in Continental Philosophy, but not in the former. Analytical philosophy, it seems, makes proposals, and comes to certain conclusions about them, using the processes of formal logic. Continental Philosophy uses much more intuition, and by contrast has an organic feel to it.
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  10. (1) Jennifer Armstrong's answer to Who is a better thinker than F. Nietzsche in terms of growing mindset? - Quora



    Jennifer Armstrong
    Jennifer Armstrong, Educator ESL and Western business knowledge
    Georges Bataille may be a better thinker for you, if you do not want to ultimately wreck yourself as Nietzsche did. I also like Dambudzo Marechera .
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