Message from @Brue

Discord ID: 650111137483980815


2019-11-29 23:06:44 UTC  

if you beleive something is impossible, you will STOP trying

2019-11-29 23:06:55 UTC  

if you beleive there is always a way, you WON'T

2019-11-29 23:06:55 UTC  

Yes :p

2019-11-29 23:07:24 UTC  

In the moments of no win scenarios I don’t have time to figure out what is and what isn’t possible I just do things

2019-11-29 23:07:53 UTC  

@svarozhyc has read Wittgenstein

2019-11-29 23:07:55 UTC  

you aren't supposed to wait till you face a scenerio to think of solutions

2019-11-29 23:07:57 UTC  

Yes doing things is good, once you've learned your capabilities a lil

2019-11-29 23:08:06 UTC  

like everything, it's about preparation

2019-11-29 23:08:18 UTC  

Certain things u simply can’t prepare for

2019-11-29 23:08:25 UTC  

and not narrowing your thinking

2019-11-29 23:08:40 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/633966934622208031/650110909804445737/2xsgqgz7tmr11.png

2019-11-29 23:08:44 UTC  

you don't prepare for 'things'

2019-11-29 23:08:46 UTC  

Narrowing is very important yes

2019-11-29 23:08:49 UTC  

you prepare YOURSELF

2019-11-29 23:09:01 UTC  

You develop a skillset/general experience

2019-11-29 23:09:04 UTC  

everyone has to filter by neccesity

2019-11-29 23:09:15 UTC  

but you should filter AFTER you cast the largest net

2019-11-29 23:09:18 UTC  

not before

2019-11-29 23:09:18 UTC  

I know one Otaku who's going to be first, hbu guys?

2019-11-29 23:09:27 UTC  

Part of intelligence is the ability to apply what you've experienced to new situations

2019-11-29 23:09:33 UTC  

you should frame before you even cast the net

2019-11-29 23:09:36 UTC  

otherwise, you throw away options you would have otherwise considered

2019-11-29 23:09:51 UTC  

exactly, svar

2019-11-29 23:10:21 UTC  

intelligence is the integration of knowledge and experience for the purpose of quick application

2019-11-29 23:10:38 UTC  

@SideTracker What if i told you your country is crumbling and youre too busy sperging over BREXIT

2019-11-29 23:10:52 UTC  

when does some nugget of knowledge become unapplicable?

2019-11-29 23:10:53 UTC  

"After a 1000th referendum, BREXIT fails"

2019-11-29 23:11:03 UTC  

Britbongs in 2064: NO WAY!

2019-11-29 23:11:20 UTC  

Dunno MA everything has some use, sometimes it's obscure

2019-11-29 23:11:24 UTC  

:p

2019-11-29 23:11:29 UTC  

gotta love democracy

2019-11-29 23:11:37 UTC  

good judgement is more valuable than knowledge as infinite knowledge without a filter for relevance is useles

2019-11-29 23:11:55 UTC  

not what i meant, Svar

2019-11-29 23:12:02 UTC  

That on scene reporting on london bridge made me feel like i was in Punjab, India or Saudi Arabia <:TripleMonkas:491962237938827264>

2019-11-29 23:12:08 UTC  

>Diversity is beautiful

2019-11-29 23:12:21 UTC  

Democracy is aight, and I've got to say my civics teachers were right all along: democracy falls when people forget why it's the way we decided to do it

2019-11-29 23:12:42 UTC  

what i meant is that the difference between knowledge and understanding is that when you understand something, you recognize when something that normally applies is no longer applicable

2019-11-29 23:12:55 UTC  

Zoomers will initiate the 4th reich as soon as they're done fucking each other in the middle school bathroom

2019-11-29 23:13:31 UTC  

Jesus ok that's convoluted but there's something to it

2019-11-29 23:14:34 UTC  

there is usually a trade-off between being about to articulate information and being able to apply something

2019-11-29 23:15:05 UTC  

the technician understands but can't articulate. the engineers can articulate but his understanding is less