Revisions of #1638

Contributors: Dennis Hackethal

I wonder if ‘drive’ is really a good word for unconscious ideas. In this context, my Dictionary app says:

 an innate, biologically determined urge to attain a goal or satisfy a need: emotional and sexual drives.

and

“determination and ambition to achieve something: her drive has sustained her through some shattering personal experiences.

But neither of those is unconscious. People are aware of their sexual and emotional drives and their ambitions.

In addition, there are other types of unconscious knowledge. As you say in your video, habitualization is a source of unconscious knowledge.

When I hear the word ‘drive’, I think of determination and ambition, which take lots of conscious effort. I don’t think of habitualized knowledge, which by definition takes no effort.

Version 1·#1638·Dennis Hackethal·2 months ago·Criticism
7 comments: #1679, #1681, #1709, #1715, #1718, #1722, and #1739

Replace non-breaking spaces with regular spaces

I wonder if ‘drive’ is really a good word for unconscious ideas. In this context, my Dictionary app says:

 an innate, biologically determined urge to attain a goal or satisfy a need: emotional and sexual drives.

and

“determination and ambition to achieve something: her drive has sustained her through some shattering personal experiences.

But neither of those is unconscious. People are aware of their sexual and emotional drives and their ambitions.

In addition, there are other types of unconscious knowledge. As you say in your video, habitualization is a source of unconscious knowledge.

When I hear the word ‘drive’, I think of determination and ambition, which take lots of conscious effort. I don’t think of habitualized knowledge, which by definition takes no effort.

I wonder if ‘drive’ is really a good word for unconscious ideas. In this context, my Dictionary app says:

an innate, biologically determined urge to attain a goal or satisfy a need: emotional and sexual drives.

and

“determination and ambition to achieve something: her drive has sustained her through some shattering personal experiences.

But neither of those is unconscious. People are aware of their sexual and emotional drives and their ambitions.

In addition, there are other types of unconscious knowledge. As you say in your video, habitualization is a source of unconscious knowledge.

When I hear the word ‘drive’, I think of determination and ambition, which take lots of conscious effort. I don’t think of habitualized knowledge, which by definition takes no effort.

Version 2·#1680·Dennis Hackethal·about 2 months ago·Criticism
7 comments: #1679, #1683, #1709, #1715, #1718, #1722, and #1739

Remove superfluous quotation marks

I wonder if ‘drive’ is really a good word for unconscious ideas. In this context, my Dictionary app says:

an innate, biologically determined urge to attain a goal or satisfy a need: emotional and sexual drives.

and

“determination and ambition to achieve something: her drive has sustained her through some shattering personal experiences.

But neither of those is unconscious. People are aware of their sexual and emotional drives and their ambitions.

In addition, there are other types of unconscious knowledge. As you say in your video, habitualization is a source of unconscious knowledge.

When I hear the word ‘drive’, I think of determination and ambition, which take lots of conscious effort. I don’t think of habitualized knowledge, which by definition takes no effort.

I wonder if ‘drive’ is really a good word for unconscious ideas. In this context, my Dictionary app says:

an innate, biologically determined urge to attain a goal or satisfy a need: emotional and sexual drives.

and

determination and ambition to achieve something: her drive has sustained her through some shattering personal experiences.

But neither of those is unconscious. People are aware of their sexual and emotional drives and their ambitions.

In addition, there are other types of unconscious knowledge. As you say in your video, habitualization is a source of unconscious knowledge.

When I hear the word ‘drive’, I think of determination and ambition, which take lots of conscious effort. I don’t think of habitualized knowledge, which by definition takes no effort.

Version 3·#1682·Dennis Hackethal·about 2 months ago·Criticism
6 comments: #1679, #1709, #1715, #1718, #1722, and #1739