Robert Kegan explaining his adult developmental theory, with @dthorson
“If you want to be Stage 5 because all the cool kids are, that’s a Stage 3 aspiration. If you want it because Stage 5 is the Correct way of thinking, that’s a Stage 4 aspiration.”https://anchor.fm/emerge/episodes/Robert-Kegan---The-Five-Stages-of-Adult-Development-And-Why-You-Probably-Arent-Stage-5-eb8gug …
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Maybe you really can’t be emotionally and relationally meta-systematic before age 40, although you can develop meta-rationality over a few years starting mid/late 20s. (Research suggests developing cognitive meta-systematicity (= meta-rationality) takes 6-10 years to complete.)
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Understanding how adults continue to develop new, deeper, more powerful cognitive skills, through their 30s at minimum, seems enormously important. Research on this is scarce, and—to be blunt—much of it is low-quality. I’d love for this to change. Big opportunity!
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it feels like one of those cases where you buy the map and the flashlight from the same store.
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Interesting analogy—I’m not quite sure I understand it—can you explain more?
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That's a useful term to know. Hitherto I've called it 'asymmetrical integration'.
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This geek is pretty good at relational programming, he'll have you know.
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I think this is true to such an extent that geeks reach stage 4 before/without stage 3. This makes these two stages not actually sequential but IMO a conflation of a personality difference (https://everythingstudies.com/2017/11/07/the-nerd-as-the-norm/ …) with a genuine advance (professionalism & managerial self).
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Following this up, there appears to be a difference between “décallage” and “décalage”. While the latter appears to be translated often as 'lag', to me the former fits better.
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and not to be confused with “décollage” -- I was, but you weren't :-)
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