Туфлю?потными ногами наверно пахнет. Мой парфюм ,которого скопилось дофиг а разного,моя систа все выкинула ,пояснив что все старое и оно испорченое.Вообще непонимаю иногда,выкидывать нормальные вещи.Я сказал ей:- если бы ты это купила за свои баблосы ,то хранила бы сама до усрачки.
Иммиграцыя-это попытка послать себя подальше
This research suggests that around 15% of career success can be attributed to intelligence, but the figure increases when jobs are complex. Another aspect of talent that has been examined is emotional intelligence - the ability to manage your own and others’ emotions. Around 9% of career success may be attributable to this trait, which is independent of learning ability. Needless to say, talent is often in the choices, and research shows that picking careers or jobs that align with your natural interests will significantly boost your career success. This is why self-awareness, which is encapsulated in most measures of emotional intelligence, is so critical. Importantly, talent is always job-specific, which is why expertise and experience have consistently emerged as predictors of performance and success. However, expertise and experience are heavily influenced by intelligence, effort, and luck (opportunities).
Since the average correlation between measures of effort and measures of career success rarely exceed 0.30, we can conclude that no more than 9% of a person’s success can typically be attributed to their ambition, drive, or motivation. Things may be different when we look at extraordinary achievers: people who sacrifice their personal life, fun, sleep, merely to optimize for career success. I’m pretty sure Serena Williams, Angela Merkel, Jeff Bezos, and Miles Davis (not to mention Madonna or Maradona) are in this category - though they probably didn’t lack talent.
Luck: We finally get to luck, and if we define it as everything that isn’t talent or effort, and accept that the combined impact of talent and effort is at most 45% (ballpark), then we have to accept that luck accounts for at least half of the equation. Kahneman was onto something. This does not refute the notion that “luck favors the prepared man” (Napoleon Bonaparte), but it’s fair to say that many of the elements that constitute “preparedness” are hardly meritocratic: attractiveness, genetics, socioeconomic status, parental educational level, biological sex, and ethnicity, all augment or handicap people’s level of career success, independently of what they are willing and able to do.
оговариваю, что мнение касается только меня, моих дел итд
в курсе, что все люди разные и у каждого свое мнение
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