faith in learning

dAilogues: Misattributing The Effects of Our Own Learning

Misattributing The Effects of Our Own Learning (full) with Gemini Index of other dAilogues Part 1:  Misattributions as Acquired Learning Disabilities Part 2: Misattributing the Effects of Our Own Learning Part 3: Summaries for Different Audiences Part 4: Definitions of Misattributions Part 5: “Growth Mindset” as Misattribution Part 6: Examples of Misattribution Part 7: Misattributions […]

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dAilogues: Self-Referencing Learning

Self-Referencing Learning (full) with Gemini Index of other dAilogues Learning always has a reference.  No matter what the learning is about or into, at any given time, there’s some kind of background that is providing the context that learning is stretching from in order to arrive at whatever is being learned. There’s a span happening

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Thinking About How Shame Works

This dailogue explores how the affect shame, the neurobiological precursor to the emotion of shame, seems to work.  Background: I am grateful to have been mentored into learning about shame by my dear friend, the epistemological philosopher and affect therapist, Gary David PhD. Gary is a proponent and practitioner of the work of the late

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Learning Hopscotch

The following occurred during a conversation about the potentially profound life-benefitting effects of learning to experience yourself as “always learning to become who you are becoming”.  Just after describing the benefits to young children who learned to learn that way. I Am Always in All Ways Learning to Become Me And, after a rough outline

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Tangent Migrations – Artificially Conventionalized Learning

This warmly, occasionally humorous, “guru” video has some very interestingly entertaining moments.   I don’t travel in guru circles so before today I had never encountered Sadhguru. Sadhguru‘s description of the “monkey brain” reminded me of my time with Cary Tagawa. Both his description of the “problem” (what I call tangent migrations) and our “is it possible,

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