Or alternatively, do we generally become wiser or more foolish - and is there anything instructive to be taken from the answer? — tim wood
Yes indeed, and seemingly unavoidable. My preference is for discussions that converge. But here I cannot quite figure out even my own question - so my hope the discussion might sharpen where it's dull. If memory serves, you have self-identified as an academic and old enough to know better about most things.Lots of room for rambling here. — jgill
Any insight as to how those cards are played, and which ones?Basically, wisdom, if one plays one's cards just right, is not a function of age. — TheMadFool
My own thinking has evolved, ... due to learning and a willingness to learn, and humility got the hard way. That is, school, experience, hard knocks, time. Wisdom, imo, something elseand also notthe subject of this thread, ... does our several thinking evolve, and more-or-less in the same way? Is any of it a function of ageand appreciation of mortality, of what is important in the face of no-longer-being? — tim wood
Any insight as to how those cards are played, and which ones? — tim wood
it's possible to create the right environment for rapid learning that would, if all goes well, concentrate and condense experience accumulated over many many years into a lecture or a book. — TheMadFool
Do you notice any long-term trend or theme in your own life of thinking? — tim wood
Well, that goes to the machine. My test is in the supermarket. I used to be able to walk very fast scanning both sides of the aisle and quickly discern what I wanted. Now I have to walk slowly and look at things - altogether a different process.At 83 I'm still able to engage in math research (of a sorts), but the aspect of thinking that I have noticed the most change in is an increasing inability to multi-task. I leave that to my wife who is ten years younger. :meh: — jgill
But an old mathematician: if you're active, are you active in the same way on the same kinds of problems? Or different somehow? — tim wood
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