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標題: 運氣在人生的重要性,以及如何變的更好 [打印本頁]

作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 07:33
標題: 運氣在人生的重要性,以及如何變的更好
本帖最後由 sec2100 於 2019-3-11 07:44 編輯

https://www.vox.com/science-and- ... ife-moral-privilege



Of course, people aren’t nearly as eager to take credit for their failures and flaws. Psychologists have shown that all humans are subject to “fundamental attribution error.” When we assess others, we tend to attribute successes to circumstance and failures to character — and when we assess our own lives, it is the opposite. Everyone’s relationship with luck is somewhat self-interested and opportunistic.

作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 07:36
作者在本文中使用「快思慢想」一書的架構:



How capable are we of altering our trajectories? How much can we change ourselves?

Here, a distinction made famous by psychologist Daniel Kahneman in his seminal Thinking, Fast and Slow is helpful. Kahneman argues that humans have two modes of thinking: “system one,” which is fast, instinctual, automatic, and often unconscious, and “system two,” which is slower, more deliberative, and emotionally “cooler” (generally traced to the prefrontal cortex).

Our system one reactions are largely hardwired by the time we become adults. But what about system two?

We do seem to have some control over it. We can use it, to some extent, to shape, channel, or even change our system one reactions over time — to change ourselves.

Everyone is familiar with that struggle; indeed, the battle between systems one and two tends to be the central drama in most human lives. When we step back and reflect, we know we need to exercise more and eat less, to be more generous and less grumpy, to manage time better and be more productive. System two recognizes those as the right decisions; they make sense; the numbers work out.

But then the moment comes and we’re sitting on the couch and system one feels very strongly that it doesn’t want to put on running shoes. It wants greasy takeout food. It wants to snap at the delivery guy for being late. Where is system two when it’s needed? It shows up later, full of regret and self-recrimination. Thanks a lot, system two.
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 07:38
To become a better person is, at least to some degree, to consciously decide what kind of person one wants to be, what kind of life one wants to lead, and to enforce that meta-decision through day-to-day smaller decisions. They say you are what you do repeatedly; our choices become habit and habit becomes character. So forming a good character, becoming a good person, means repeatedly choosing to do the right thing until it becomes habit.
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 07:44
The only way to change it is to use system-two thinking to override system one — to intervene in my own anger — again and again, until a different, better reaction becomes habitual and I become, in a literal sense, a different, better person. (That project is, uh, ongoing.)

The same is true for being a good parent, saving money, making more friends, or any other long-term life goal; it often involves overriding our own instincts — many of which are grossly maladaptive.

Do people deserve moral credit for what they do with their system-two thinking? Perhaps that’s the mechanism through which meritocracy works, through which people really do get what they deserve?
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 07:46
Using system two to regulate system one is difficult. Exercising the kind of self-discipline necessary to override system one reactions with deliberative, system-two choices is effortful. It drains energy. (See Brian Resnick’s fascinating discussion of the famous “marshmallow test” for more on this.)

Doing it requires certain conditions: a degree of self-possession, a degree of freedom from more basic physical needs like food and shelter, some training and habituation. Even with those advantages, it’s difficult. There’s an entire “life hacking” genre devoted to tricks and techniques that system-two thinking can use to counteract system one’s predilections for salty snacks and procrastination.
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 07:47
And the thing is, not everyone has equal access to those conditions. Whether and how much you have the ability to exercise system two in this way is largely — you guessed it — part of your inheritance. It too depends on where you were born, how you were raised, the resources to which you had access.

Even our desire and ability to alter our trajectory is largely determined by our trajectory.

有時候要改變人生,或是小到要改變交易的品質,都是很宿命的。

作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 08:03
下面這句話絕對是在罵川普的:


Some people don’t much need the ability to self-regulate, because their failures of self-regulation are forgiven and forgotten. If you are, say, a white male born to wealth, like Donald Trump, you can blunder about and fuck up over and over again. You’ll always have access to more money and social connections; the justice system will always go easy on you; you’ll always get more second chances. You could even be president someday, without being required to learn anything or develop any skills relevant to the job.
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 08:05
And, especially if you are poor, one step out of line — one incident at school, one brush with the justice system, one stupid teenage prank — can mean years or even a lifetime of consequences. Subaltern groups have to self-regulate twice as much to have half a chance.
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 08:06
Your capacity for self-regulation and self-improvement, and your need for them, are both part of your inheritance. They come to you via life’s lottery. Via luck.
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 08:07
I get why people bridle at this point. They want credit for their achievements and for their better qualities. As Varney said, it can be insulting to be told that one’s success is in large part a lucky roll of the dice.
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 08:09
Child development psychologists tell us that deep and lasting shaping of neural pathways happens in the first hours, days, months, and years of life. Basic dispositions are formed that can last a lifetime. Whether you are held, spoken to, fed, made to feel safe and cared for — you have no choice in any of it, but it more or less forms your emotional skeleton. It determines how sensitive you are to threat, how open you are to new experience, your capacity to exercise empathy.


人生很多事情一生出來,以及在他的兒童發展時期就註定了,很難改變。人的成功,也制約於他的條件,平心而論,人的成功,也是運氣使然(看你出生在什麼家庭)。
作者: tsung7788    時間: 2019-3-11 20:23
嗯!!這樣說起來,川普能當總統,實在不是他多有能力,有多努力,而是他有多幸運,芸芸眾生只能夠為生活奔波辛苦,只因我們不是那隻幸運的精蟲罷了!!
作者: sec2100    時間: 2019-3-11 21:39
tsung7788 發表於 2019-3-11 20:23
嗯!!這樣說起來,川普能當總統,實在不是他多有能力,有多努力,而是他有多幸運,芸芸眾生只能夠為生活奔波辛苦, ...

並不是說後天不能改變命運,只是要非常有前瞻性的過生活,走過人世這一遭,並不容易。
作者: ant1964    時間: 2019-3-11 21:46
有很多人說:人的一ˋ生可以賺多少錢或者有多少成就,早就註定好了
個人並不認同,這個似是而非的觀念
川普他,如只想當個有錢人並過者安逸的生活,不求上進,他會當上總統嗎?





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