Very observant post. I’ve noticed this ‘learned blankness’ in a lot of people when it comes to ‘nerdy’ areas like math and science, probably because I’m not as blank in these areas. (There are plenty of things I don’t know very much about, like for example the North American legal system, but my usual thought is “wow I would really like to get a book/do a wikipedia search out on that!”) Unfortunately it’s not as easy to pinpoint the areas where I am blank.
But before giving it even ten seconds’ thought, I’d classified the problem as a “mechanical thing”.
As part of my ‘mission to become a real grownup’, I’ve started trying to solve small household problems like this on my own. Sometimes it leads to a lot of time-wasting, like the time I spent half an hour trying to fix the toilet when it turned out my roommate had just turned the water off because the sound kept her awake. I would have saved myself an hour if I’d made the problem not my responsability, but now I have a pattern-recognition schema in my head for toilet problems...the first thing I’ll check for next time, after “is is plugged?” will be “is the water on?” I’m assuming that this is how most people become good in these areas...
For entertaining examples of mechanical reasoning, cartalk is pretty good. I imagine that many of their listeners think of the hosts as “magically knowledgeable” about cars, rather than as having experienced tens of thousands of car related stories in the vein of your toilette example.
Very observant post. I’ve noticed this ‘learned blankness’ in a lot of people when it comes to ‘nerdy’ areas like math and science, probably because I’m not as blank in these areas. (There are plenty of things I don’t know very much about, like for example the North American legal system, but my usual thought is “wow I would really like to get a book/do a wikipedia search out on that!”) Unfortunately it’s not as easy to pinpoint the areas where I am blank.
As part of my ‘mission to become a real grownup’, I’ve started trying to solve small household problems like this on my own. Sometimes it leads to a lot of time-wasting, like the time I spent half an hour trying to fix the toilet when it turned out my roommate had just turned the water off because the sound kept her awake. I would have saved myself an hour if I’d made the problem not my responsability, but now I have a pattern-recognition schema in my head for toilet problems...the first thing I’ll check for next time, after “is is plugged?” will be “is the water on?” I’m assuming that this is how most people become good in these areas...
For entertaining examples of mechanical reasoning, cartalk is pretty good. I imagine that many of their listeners think of the hosts as “magically knowledgeable” about cars, rather than as having experienced tens of thousands of car related stories in the vein of your toilette example.