I guess I don’t understand what you mean by ‘wtf’ then, because to my mind, ‘highly-wtf’ indicates a profound surprise at something that is outside the normal range of experience, but we all know that some people are good at remembering phone numbers, and some aren’t, while some are good at remembering birth dates and others aren’t. That is normal human variation.
I don’t see at all how “people who consistently reply so far unlike me to those wtf-ish questions must be seriously weird, not just differ in minor quantitative ways”. Why would somebody be seriously weird because they do or don’t have a good memory for phone numbers and birthdates?
but we all know that some people are good at remembering phone numbers, and some aren’t, while some are good at remembering birth dates and others aren’t. That is normal human variation.
No, this is far outside what I consider human normality to easily remember birth dates and numbers. This is not “good memory”, this is memory which works completely differently from how mine works.
The obvious reason that it is a bad thing is that a single example contains no information about the range of variation in the population it is drawn from. You will know more if you look around you, and observe the actual range.
But this is elementary stuff. Frankly, I am at a loss to find any interpretation of “I don’t see this as a bad thing at all” that is compatible with being here in the first place.
I guess I don’t understand what you mean by ‘wtf’ then, because to my mind, ‘highly-wtf’ indicates a profound surprise at something that is outside the normal range of experience, but we all know that some people are good at remembering phone numbers, and some aren’t, while some are good at remembering birth dates and others aren’t. That is normal human variation.
I don’t see at all how “people who consistently reply so far unlike me to those wtf-ish questions must be seriously weird, not just differ in minor quantitative ways”. Why would somebody be seriously weird because they do or don’t have a good memory for phone numbers and birthdates?
Seconded. Why is that ‘wtf’? Seems normal to me.
No, this is far outside what I consider human normality to easily remember birth dates and numbers. This is not “good memory”, this is memory which works completely differently from how mine works.
You seem to be equating “human normality” with “how mine works”.
Yes, this is exactly what I’m doing, and I don’t see this as a bad thing at all.
The obvious reason that it is a bad thing is that a single example contains no information about the range of variation in the population it is drawn from. You will know more if you look around you, and observe the actual range.
But this is elementary stuff. Frankly, I am at a loss to find any interpretation of “I don’t see this as a bad thing at all” that is compatible with being here in the first place.
Tell us more.
Generalizing from one example