an entire subfield of experimental psychology today is devoted to phenomena variously called “effortful control,” “self-regulation,” “time discounting,” “ego strength,” or (more appealingly) “willpower” and “grit.”
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
, education—like hard work—is not an independent, but a dependent variable. It’s not the explanatory factor; it’s a behavior to be explained.
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
Mormon culture for much of the twentieth century remained relatively closed to intellectual and scientific inquiry, emphasizing “the authority of scripture over human reason.” In 1967, future Church president Spencer Kimball urged the faculty of Brigham Young University to remember that Mormons are “men of God first and men of letters second, and men of science third … men of rectitude rather than academic competence.”
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
Today, American culture—whether high or low, blue state or red, blue collar or ivory tower—is much more ambivalent about, and undermining of, everything the Triple Package stands for
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
eminence, including one conducted by Howard Gardner, most famous for his theory of multiple intelligences.
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
Winston Churchill: the twinge of adversity, the spur of slights and taunts in early years are needed to evoke
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
the twinge of adversity, the spur of slights and taunts in early years are needed to evoke that
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
the twinge of adversity, the spur of slights and taunts in early years
daryaksyonzhas quoted7 years ago
Mormons, too, weave into their superiority complex their discipline, abstemiousness, and the hardships they endure on mission (a usually two-year proselytizing stint in an assigned location anywhere from Cleveland to Tonga)