Someone asked me “how can we promote long-term thinking in our society?” Initially I was stumped, but now I think I have a good answer: “Provide for people’s basic needs first.” When folks are worried about their health and livelihood, it consumes their day-to-day thoughts.
-
Pokaż ten wątek
-
W odpowiedzi do @mijustin
I agree and disagree. Once basic needs are met, humans usually just reach for the next short term thing. We're not very good about long term thinking/actions as a whole. I wish we'd could track where stimulus checks were going. That would be telling.
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionych -
W odpowiedzi do @mikecodemonkey
This hasn’t been my experience at all. Once Transistor was making good money, I immediately transitioned into long-term thinking, planning, doing: - more community involvement - more giving to causes - more saving and investing - more reading and writing about non-biz stuff
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 3 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do @mijustin @mikecodemonkey
Unfortunately though I think I agree with Mike here Justin. While the 3 of us may think long term. I assume that's in our nature. Many people I think move to "the next thing" not thinking long term. I wish I could believe humans were different though.
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionych -
W odpowiedzi do @rezzz @mikecodemonkey
The current research here is pretty clear: “Lacking the resources to satisfy one’s needs has a profound impact on [long-term] decision making.”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6575633/ …
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 4 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do @mijustin @mikecodemonkey
I stand corrected Thanks for sharing that. I guess my pessimistic side has shined through today a bit
2 odpowiedzi 0 podanych dalej 1 polubiony -
The book Scarcity backs that all up as well. When faced with immediate needs you have no bandwidth to think past whatever is currently hitting the fan
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 2 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do to @curtismchale@rezzz i jeszcze
I think the scarcity research suggests that without basic needs met, no one looks past it. But I don’t think the research suggests the opposite- that meeting basic needs automatically turns people into long term thinkers. I’ve not seen that to be true.
4 odpowiedzi 0 podanych dalej 4 polubione
Good cognitive reasoning is, in itself, long-term thinking. It gives us the time, space, and energy to fully consider a bigger picture. https://www.psychologytoday.com/ca/blog/good-thinking/201309/why-having-too-little-leads-bad-decisions …pic.twitter.com/MBr0C29Yxq
-
-
W odpowiedzi do to @mijustin@chrislema i jeszcze
"Poor borrowed more". Doesn't mean they had needs met. But in this case, if it was a matter of long term thinking once needs met, wouldn't then their be no poverty since the solution is right there?
0 odpowiedzi 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionychDziękujemy. Twitter skorzysta z tych informacji, aby Twoja oś czasu bardziej Ci odpowiadała. CofnijCofnij
-
Wydaje się, że ładowanie zajmuje dużo czasu.
Twitter jest przeciążony lub wystąpił chwilowy problem. Spróbuj ponownie lub sprawdź status Twittera, aby uzyskać więcej informacji.
building