There sure isn't a person like this, but it can be said to be an
ideal that we can strive for.
I'd view it as more 'unbiased' than 'unlimited,' though. If we're unbiased and not subject to a given lens, then we can view the world through a multitude of different lenses,
choose the right one for the job (which requires some wisdom), and press on.
Man, yeah. I'd venture to say that sometimes this "wishing" becomes "believing" or "convincing oneself." Perhaps, at some level, it's not even realizing that practicing swimming is an
option--that intellectualizing things (studying them from a distance and/or with the rational brain) is the only way to learn about things.
I say all of this having been guilty of it at times. What [MENTION=332]Mycroft[/MENTION] has said about stumbling upon a system, enthusiastically trying it out, and seeing it fail (at least in certain ways) definitely resonates with me, too. I'm.. sure that most of us have been through this with typology