How do we really know someone? Level 3. As a psychologist moves from an analysis at Level 1 (general traits) to Level 2 (personal concerns), their sense of knowing the other person increases.
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How do we really know someone? Level 3. As a psychologist moves from an analysis at Level 1 (general traits) to Level 2 (personal concerns), their sense of knowing the other person increases.
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So there is an active element on the part of the person you come to know, and it is this aspect of knowing someone, the communication between you, that makes knowing someone so meaningful, and by ...
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Knowing someone is a cumulation of shared experiences, of stumbling upon mannerisms and quirks. It lends itself to an organic ability to anticipate their reaction to things — to know when and how their anger will thaw, what sparks their passion and what that passion looks like, ...
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Knowing of someone, is hearing or reading hearsay of a person. It can be gossip or second-hand accounts. When their reputation or alleged deeds precede them, then you know of someone.
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If you notice most of these traits in someone, they’re likely to be a know-it-all. 1. They’re insecure. A know-it-all person is fundamentally insecure about who they are. Insecurity leads to inferiority, and inferiority to the development of a superiority complex. A know-it-all person thinks they’re superior in knowledge to everyone else. 2.
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Add 7 depths of knowing. 1 – Stranger – Someone you have never met nor talked to. You might see them on a plane, in a store or at work. You might even have thoughts of what you think you know about them because humans do that – we draw conclusions from what we see. Do you know them? Absolutely not! You see with your eyeballs.
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Recognizing People’s Inherent Worth and Dignity. To get to know someone deeply, the third step you need to take is to recognize each person’s great worth as a human being. Brooks emphasizes that this is crucial even when you’ve just met a person or expect to never see them again.
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We can know about a person, but we can’t completely understand a person. Because everyone has his own hidden truths, unbearable personality traits and stories that can’t be shared. Each one of us is an Incident. Every personality is a story. So, next time before claiming that you know someone from inside out, think multiple times!
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Indirect Knowing There is a vast difference between knowing about and actually knowing a human being. The first kind of knowledge is indirect, that is, factual, objective, detached and dispassionate.
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In knowing each other as “you” and “I,” two persons united in a second-personal interaction are and spontaneously know each other as the joint subject of their act. Hence knowledge by interaction—the kind of knowledge which grounds the everyday conception of knowing someone “personally”—is necessarily shared.
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