No Short-Cut to Competence |
|
|
|
| Daily Dose of Reason - Psychology & Self-Improvement | ||||
| Monday, 19 October 2009 00:00 | ||||
Hurrying is the alleged short-cut to competence. You don't get an effective result by rushing. You get an effective result by being conscientious and accurate. More and more instances of doing something competently lead to greater and greater efficiency. But you can't achieve this via a short-cut. You've got to earn it. Rushing is an attempt to bypass earning it.
|
||||
Special Feature
Featured
Shopping
Books & Booklets Audio Commentaries, Interviews & Advice Articles & Essays Coaching/Therapy Newsletter Newsletter Back Issues MerchandiseOther
Shopper and Email login
Shopping Cart
Your Cart is currently empty.
Wait for the payment page to appear after your order is confirmed. If you haven't entered your payment information, your order will not be completed. When ordering instant downloads, your shipping and credit card billing addresses must match. Problems? Call 302-539-5986 or contact Dr. Hurd.
DR. HURD'S NEW BOOK!
Click here to purchase your autographed copy!(Choose domestic or International delivery. Price includes shipping.)
Daily Dose Mug
Get your official Daily Dose Coffee Mug! Click "merchandise" in the shopping menu to the left. Psychotherapy
Want to address an issue head on in a peaceful, oceanside location? Come to the beaches of Delaware for our special Reflection...by the Sea package.Stop and Think...
" If you fear failure, you shall never succeed. "Evan Guay
Recent News
- Hatred Does Not Bring Prosperity
- Why Obama Failed
- "Waste Not, Want Not" -- Another Myth!
- All Children Left Behind
- Aristotle on Private Property
- "It's for your own good."
- Get past the past!
- Now France Has a Socialist President, Too
- What's A Few Trillion of Other People's Money Between Friends?
- DSM-V Exposes Psychiatry as the "Science" of Majority Vote and Focus Groups



Hurrying is the alleged short-cut to competence. You don't get an effective result by rushing. You get an effective result by being conscientious and accurate. More and more instances of doing something competently lead to greater and greater efficiency. But you can't achieve this via a short-cut. You've got to earn it. Rushing is an attempt to bypass earning it.
