• @[email protected]
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    13 months ago

    Talent might be practice because you used the same part of your brain on other aspects of life.

    For example, if you gamed early in life, this “practice” may contribute to you being good with your brain, which makes you “talented” in math.

    Playing with dolls in early life may lead to being more creative, and this being more talented in drawing.

    The practicing begins the moment you start interacting with the world.

    Or something along those lines.

    • @azertyfun
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      13 months ago

      Now you’re just reaching at straws to comfort your worldview. I could explain to you that I never was a huge gamer (and only started spending significant time gaming around 12 y/o), and that I am hugely uncreative (in the traditional sense at least) despite having played with dolls as a child. But I get the feeling that you’ll just come up with more explanations why I somehow unconsciously “trained” the things I’m naturally good at.

      Anything to avoid facing the fact that brains, like bodies, aren’t all created equal and identical. To pretend they are is completely ridiculous. Yet we do so because admitting that not everyone is born with equal potential breaks through the veil of The Meritocracy™, Karma™ and all the other little lies we tell ourselves to avoid facing the fact that the world is fundamentally unjust.