Then I'm glad you are not a brain surgeon. Or working on bomb deactivation. Or as a fireman in a petroleum refinery (clue: it does not mean what you think).
I get better from not enjoying my mistakes. It gives me motive to prevent them (which involves precluding shit from happening).
No, we were talking about your celebration of mistakes in life generally. It was only in the last exchange that you retreated into the world of test experiences, which is not an issue.
How your attitude toward mistakes has anything to do with Trump's actions is a mystery to me. You never bothered to explain it. I haven't seen him make a mistake.
No, learning from your mistake is a good thing, not making the mistake. I saw that with my high school friends who had spiral fractures from skiing accidents. Nobody welcomed those mistakes or thought they were good. You improve by continual and correct practice. Mistakes made while learning how to ride a horse can have fatal consequences. The only good thing about them is surviving them. And presumably one learns a lesson, it a lesson is there to be learned.
We are not arguing over experience but about your celebration of being wrong.
Sometimes a lot of controlled practice is needed before the Big Time, when being right or wrong can have life or death consequences. And, in the Big Time, the experience of sustained correctness is the thing that prevents error. Now you retreat from the Big Time into a Staging/Test Environment. Sloppy argument, but a wise retreat.
What has Trump's actions in the situation room have to do with your attitude toward mistakes?
I know you think mistakes are a good thing (the more, the merrier). But you sensibly retreated from making mistakes in life-critical situations. Unless you now revert to being a brain surgeon or bomb squad deactivator, there to make your mistakes. I've already explained to you how, in real life, mistakes are to be avoided, never celebrated, and always a good thing to overcome and prevent.
Then I'm glad you are not a brain surgeon. Or working on bomb deactivation. Or as a fireman in a petroleum refinery (clue: it does not mean what you think).
I get better from not enjoying my mistakes. It gives me motive to prevent them (which involves precluding shit from happening).
LOL!
They do make mistakes DURING TRAINING!
The context of this conversation is talking about Trump's actions.
LOL!!. how can you not understand the context here. Are you serious!!!
No, we were talking about your celebration of mistakes in life generally. It was only in the last exchange that you retreated into the world of test experiences, which is not an issue.
How your attitude toward mistakes has anything to do with Trump's actions is a mystery to me. You never bothered to explain it. I haven't seen him make a mistake.
Yes.. mistakes are GOOD thing. It's how you improve.
How does a QB improve in football? They learn from mistakes in rookie year.
AI computers work off of a
Try -> Fail -> Adjust -> Try Again model. This is how learning works.
Over time. Muscle memory takes over.
No, learning from your mistake is a good thing, not making the mistake. I saw that with my high school friends who had spiral fractures from skiing accidents. Nobody welcomed those mistakes or thought they were good. You improve by continual and correct practice. Mistakes made while learning how to ride a horse can have fatal consequences. The only good thing about them is surviving them. And presumably one learns a lesson, it a lesson is there to be learned.
WHAT DOES EXPERIENCE mean!!!
Someone with EXPERIENCE has made errors and know what to avoid.
That doesn't mean errors in PRODUCTION!
That means errors in a STAGING/TEST environment. That's how experience is gained.
We are not arguing over experience but about your celebration of being wrong.
Sometimes a lot of controlled practice is needed before the Big Time, when being right or wrong can have life or death consequences. And, in the Big Time, the experience of sustained correctness is the thing that prevents error. Now you retreat from the Big Time into a Staging/Test Environment. Sloppy argument, but a wise retreat.
We are talking about TRUMP'S ACTIONS on IRAN.
We aren't in the situation room dude.
LOL! and you think I am retreating???
No... I stand by my beliefs. Making mistakes is a GOOD THING.
Because that's how people get better. This is true in everything from sports to relationships.
What has Trump's actions in the situation room have to do with your attitude toward mistakes?
I know you think mistakes are a good thing (the more, the merrier). But you sensibly retreated from making mistakes in life-critical situations. Unless you now revert to being a brain surgeon or bomb squad deactivator, there to make your mistakes. I've already explained to you how, in real life, mistakes are to be avoided, never celebrated, and always a good thing to overcome and prevent.