Cincinnati United States
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Twice everyday I walk into the cigar shop and plunk down hard earned money. If you had me hooked to a lie detector you would see that I honestly believe I was going to win that very draw.
I rarely do,but expect to anyways
in·san·i·ty/in'sanite/Noun
2. Extreme foolishness or irrationality.
Albert Einstein Quotes - Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results...
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Quote: Originally posted by SteveC on Jun 16, 2011
Twice everyday I walk into the cigar shop and plunk down hard earned money. If you had me hooked to a lie detector you would see that I honestly believe I was going to win that very draw.
I rarely do,but expect to anyways
in·san·i·ty/in'sanite/Noun
2. Extreme foolishness or irrationality.
Albert Einstein Quotes - Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results...
SteveC: People who know a lot more about the functionings of the human mind than Albert Einstein have gone to a lot of trouble to define what is, what isn't, and what might be. The fact they don't agree among themselves doesn't add any strength to what Einstein said about it, but it does leave a lot of elbow room for people who know even less about insanity than he did to add their own definitions to the ocean of them already in print and discourse.
What a person believes about winning lotteries is fairly small potatoes in the insanity arena except as a means of stereotyping people who believe or behave differently than we, ourselves, believe or behave. There's little, or no evidence some overall condition of 'sanity' has much influence in any of our lives.
As a species, as nations, states and localities we've been doing the same things over and over again for at least half a century and expecting different results in issues with a lot more damaging consequences than what we think about lotteries. Either Albert was wrong or insanity is the pot calling the kettle black.
Validation: All statements made above are accurate, precise, lucid and sometimes supported by factoids written down somewhere.
Cincinnati United States
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Quote: Originally posted by JosephusMinimus on Jun 16, 2011
SteveC: People who know a lot more about the functionings of the human mind than Albert Einstein have gone to a lot of trouble to define what is, what isn't, and what might be. The fact they don't agree among themselves doesn't add any strength to what Einstein said about it, but it does leave a lot of elbow room for people who know even less about insanity than he did to add their own definitions to the ocean of them already in print and discourse.
What a person believes about winning lotteries is fairly small potatoes in the insanity arena except as a means of stereotyping people who believe or behave differently than we, ourselves, believe or behave. There's little, or no evidence some overall condition of 'sanity' has much influence in any of our lives.
As a species, as nations, states and localities we've been doing the same things over and over again for at least half a century and expecting different results in issues with a lot more damaging consequences than what we think about lotteries. Either Albert was wrong or insanity is the pot calling the kettle black.
lottoville United States
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August 11, 2010
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Quote: Originally posted by SteveC on Jun 16, 2011
Twice everyday I walk into the cigar shop and plunk down hard earned money. If you had me hooked to a lie detector you would see that I honestly believe I was going to win that very draw.
I rarely do,but expect to anyways
in·san·i·ty/in'sanite/Noun
2. Extreme foolishness or irrationality.
Albert Einstein Quotes - Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results...
I don't care if Einstein said that quote but it's just plain wrong, doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results can not be the definition of insanity.
An example would be, if I walked into my bedroom and flicked a light switch 10 nights in a row and had the light turn on every single time, on the 11th night I'm about to flick the switch, would it be insane of me to believe I might get a different result, as in maybe the light might not turn on?
How could that be insane to think the light might not come on just because it came on the other 10 times I flicked the switch? Who hasn't ever flicked a light switch expecting a light to come on the same way it has countless times before, only to get a different result?
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Quote: Originally posted by OwlCreekBridge on Jun 16, 2011
I don't care if Einstein said that quote but it's just plain wrong, doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results can not be the definition of insanity.
An example would be, if I walked into my bedroom and flicked a light switch 10 nights in a row and had the light turn on every single time, on the 11th night I'm about to flick the switch, would it be insane of me to believe I might get a different result, as in maybe the light might not turn on?
How could that be insane to think the light might not come on just because it came on the other 10 times I flicked the switch? Who hasn't ever flicked a light switch expecting a light to come on the same way it has countless times before, only to get a different result?
sorry Einstein, stick to physics.
What Einstein was referring to is working on problems. If you conduct a test in order to solve the problem, and the test shows a negative result, it would be insane to do the exact same test over again and expect a different result.
This also applies to everyday people who wonder why their lives never change for the better. They keep the same habits going for 10 years and wonder why they never get ahead. If someone wants to change their lifestyle for the better, I.E. better job, better relationships, or whatever, they have to do something different than what they're doing now.
If i want to be a great guitar player, and i play the same chords over and over, or play the same scales over and over, without learning new techniques, and /or theories, scales, and so forth, I'll be the same old average Joe guitar player. I have a friend like this. i taught him how to play the guitar in the Navy many years ago, But in all that time, he still plays the same way. He never wanted to learn anything more, and was happy with his current playing style. And people around him can tell.
Einstein once said, "I try solving a problem 999 times and fail, but on the 1,000th time i succeed". He wasn't using the same info 1,000 times to achieve this. He was looking at the problem from different angles everytime.
Surely don't confuse repetition with what Einstein was saying. Repetition is good for certain things, like learning how to juggle. But Einstein was referring to problem solving techniques.
lottoville United States
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Quote: Originally posted by joker17 on Jun 16, 2011
What Einstein was referring to is working on problems. If you conduct a test in order to solve the problem, and the test shows a negative result, it would be insane to do the exact same test over again and expect a different result.
This also applies to everyday people who wonder why their lives never change for the better. They keep the same habits going for 10 years and wonder why they never get ahead. If someone wants to change their lifestyle for the better, I.E. better job, better relationships, or whatever, they have to do something different than what they're doing now.
If i want to be a great guitar player, and i play the same chords over and over, or play the same scales over and over, without learning new techniques, and /or theories, scales, and so forth, I'll be the same old average Joe guitar player. I have a friend like this. i taught him how to play the guitar in the Navy many years ago, But in all that time, he still plays the same way. He never wanted to learn anything more, and was happy with his current playing style. And people around him can tell.
Einstein once said, "I try solving a problem 999 times and fail, but on the 1,000th time i succeed". He wasn't using the same info 1,000 times to achieve this. He was looking at the problem from different angles everytime.
Surely don't confuse repetition with what Einstein was saying. Repetition is good for certain things, like learning how to juggle. But Einstein was referring to problem solving techniques.
Evoking Einstein's name is just an appeal to authority. Einstein contributed many things to our understanding of the world but he was not a demigod and he was not infallible. If you look at the statement and try to determine it's truth value, you'll realize it is wrong. Doing the same thing and expecting different results is not the definition of insanity.
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Quote: Originally posted by OwlCreekBridge on Jun 16, 2011
Evoking Einstein's name is just an appeal to authority. Einstein contributed many things to our understanding of the world but he was not a demigod and he was not infallible. If you look at the statement and try to determine it's truth value, you'll realize it is wrong. Doing the same thing and expecting different results is not the definition of insanity.
Again, it all depends what you're applying it to.
If I try to break a hole into a solid wall of steel with a plastic fork, and after 5 attempts the fork broke, yet I got another plastic fork for another attempt, that would constitue being insane, or just plain dumb.
But if i realized a plastic fork wasn't going to do the job, and got an electric drill strong enough, then I would be sane.
lottoville United States
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Quote: Originally posted by joker17 on Jun 16, 2011
Again, it all depends what you're applying it to.
If I try to break a hole into a solid wall of steel with a plastic fork, and after 5 attempts the fork broke, yet I got another plastic fork for another attempt, that would constitue being insane, or just plain dumb.
But if i realized a plastic fork wasn't going to do the job, and got an electric drill strong enough, then I would be sane.
the problem with the statement and the reason it should never be used, is it implies that if someone doesn’t put their faith in inductive reasoning, then they are insane.
And yes, inductive reasoning is a form of faith. If you don’t believe me look up the “problem of induction.”
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Quote: Originally posted by OwlCreekBridge on Jun 16, 2011
the problem with the statement and the reason it should never be used, is it implies that if someone doesn’t put their faith in inductive reasoning, then they are insane.
And yes, inductive reasoning is a form of faith. If you don’t believe me look up the “problem of induction.”
You're really making it more complicated than it is. Faith has nothing to do with this.
lottoville United States
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Quote: Originally posted by joker17 on Jun 16, 2011
How do you figure?
It's not faith to believe a drill will work better than a plastic fork, it's a fact. I believe you're thinking way too hard.
you're right but I never knew thinking was a fault. I'm sure you don't know what inductive reasoning is let alone know how it could possibly be an act of faith.
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Quote: Originally posted by OwlCreekBridge on Jun 16, 2011
you're right but I never knew thinking was a fault. I'm sure you don't know what inductive reasoning is let alone know how it could possibly be an act of faith.
Thinking is not a fault, but thinking about something that has nothing to do with what Einstein says in that quote is called drifting away from the facts. You keep interjecting things that dilute what he's saying.
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Quote: Originally posted by SteveC on Jun 16, 2011
Twice everyday I walk into the cigar shop and plunk down hard earned money. If you had me hooked to a lie detector you would see that I honestly believe I was going to win that very draw.
I rarely do,but expect to anyways
in·san·i·ty/in'sanite/Noun
2. Extreme foolishness or irrationality.
Albert Einstein Quotes - Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results...