keannu
VIP Member
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2010
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Korean
- Home Country
- South Korea
- Current Location
- South Korea
1. Does this "anything but continue in the same direction" mean "the change will go on" or not? "Anything but" means "never" and "same direction" is confusing.
2.You don't have to answer this question if this is too big, but I'd like to know some actual examples of each approach "simple place" and "highly complicated place". Maybe this depends on the attitude of people seeing the world. If A and B both live in New York, and A is more laid back, he would take things so simply, while B with complicated attitude would take things in complicated ways.
is31
ex)While Westerners believe that things don't change much, Asians believe that things are constantly changing. These differing assumptions about change can be derived from different understandings about the complexity of the world, which in turn are a consequence of attending to a small part of the environment versus a lot of it. If the world appears a simple place because we're not paying attention to much of it, then not much change is to be expected. If change is occurring, then there is no reason to assume that it will do anything but continue in the same direction. But if the world seems to be a highly complicated place because we're noticing so much, then stability will be the exception and change will be the rule. The greater the number of factors operating, the greater the likelihood that some variable will alter the rate of change or even reverse its direction.
2.You don't have to answer this question if this is too big, but I'd like to know some actual examples of each approach "simple place" and "highly complicated place". Maybe this depends on the attitude of people seeing the world. If A and B both live in New York, and A is more laid back, he would take things so simply, while B with complicated attitude would take things in complicated ways.
is31
ex)While Westerners believe that things don't change much, Asians believe that things are constantly changing. These differing assumptions about change can be derived from different understandings about the complexity of the world, which in turn are a consequence of attending to a small part of the environment versus a lot of it. If the world appears a simple place because we're not paying attention to much of it, then not much change is to be expected. If change is occurring, then there is no reason to assume that it will do anything but continue in the same direction. But if the world seems to be a highly complicated place because we're noticing so much, then stability will be the exception and change will be the rule. The greater the number of factors operating, the greater the likelihood that some variable will alter the rate of change or even reverse its direction.