Posts Tagged ‘judgment’
ACLR: How Do You Judge A Person?
Welcome back to Applied Curiosity Lab Radio. Sorry about the audio, but don’t let that stop you from chomping on this Curiosity Bite: How Do You Judge a Person? If you had to judge someone by their face, but were unable to determine their sex, gender, race, or nationality what would you use to judge the person? What’s the first thing that comes to mind?
Read MoreACLR: By What Standards Do You Judge Yourself?
Welcome back to Applied Curiosity Lab Radio. This episode chomps on the Curiosity Bite exploring how we judge and create our own standards. How do we know if our judgment is good? How do we know if our standards need resetting?
Read More5 Lubricants for The Age of Curiosity
It is dangerous not to see now as the urgent time to usher in the Age of Curiosity. Just ask the hilariously brilliant Amy Schumer. WTH does Amy have anything to do with curiosity? Great! You’re curious.
If you skip all these words of foreplay and jump right down to the bullet points (like we all do–so busy we are!), you’ll make the case for curiosity in that one action alone. If not, here’s your case for curiosity now:
Read More5 Phrases That Are Killing Curiosity
I knew something horrible had happened. The sound scared me before I felt anything more than a weird sensation. Immediately the intense sympathy I could never quite muster for people complaining of backaches came rushing in with the pain.
The culprit was one of those huge tractor tires in a torturous bootcamp exercise class. As per instructions, I was flipping it over and over. If I had been paid to do it, I would have refused on the principle that it was workplace endangerment. In this case, I was actually paying real money to do this.
Read MoreUse Curiosity to Avoid This Trap
“I would love to see the statistics of domestic violence in the NFL versus the general population.”
“What do you mean by statistics?”
“Well, I mean the reported rates. I bet the reported rates are a lot higher in the NFL than in the general population.”
“Really? What would that mean?”
Could it mean that:
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