Ghost of the dead horse
filling some space
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2007
- Messages
- 3,552
- MBTI Type
- ENTJ
What are the advantages of each approach?
One philosophy professor advocated the idea of "micro-change", gradual small steps in developing oneself, or behavior. This one worked at the department of system analysis, seeing human behavior as a result from how the human system works. So the system is tuned in small increments, it's a working system afterall.
Examples of the opposite approach are too numerous to list here. TV is filled with reality series where you exercise intensively for 6 months, you lose weight in an extreme weight control program, etc. And these kinds of big programs are exciting, sometimes motivating. They deeply use a sense of self, as in, "I am a person who loses weight now", "I am a future fit person" etc.
So can we form a guide when to select the path of gradual improvements and when a big sudden program is preferable?
One philosophy professor advocated the idea of "micro-change", gradual small steps in developing oneself, or behavior. This one worked at the department of system analysis, seeing human behavior as a result from how the human system works. So the system is tuned in small increments, it's a working system afterall.
Examples of the opposite approach are too numerous to list here. TV is filled with reality series where you exercise intensively for 6 months, you lose weight in an extreme weight control program, etc. And these kinds of big programs are exciting, sometimes motivating. They deeply use a sense of self, as in, "I am a person who loses weight now", "I am a future fit person" etc.
So can we form a guide when to select the path of gradual improvements and when a big sudden program is preferable?