Hi, I'm a developer from Edinburgh, Scotland. Currently I am focusing on React and front-end development, but I also enjoy NodeJS on the back-end. Find me on Twitter @jckfshr ✌️
Great article Ryan. I've always thought that people would benefit from putting themselves in the other person's shoes more often. I believe it's really important to try your hardest to understand why the person you are debating with has the view point that they do.
It's also import to recognise your own bias. Everyone thinks that their view points are correct, it's human nature to feel this way. Recognising that you might not be correct even if you strongly feel like you are is a strong skill to have.
Head of Product at Temporal. Previously lead architect and low-level systems programmer for scale out SaaS offering. Game engine developer, ML engineering expert. DMs open on Twitter.
It's also import to recognise your own bias. Everyone thinks that their view points are correct, it's human nature to feel this way. Recognising that you might not be correct even if you strongly feel like you are is a strong skill to have
Probably the hardest, yet most important skill to have. It's the only practical way to keep improving yourself.
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Great article Ryan. I've always thought that people would benefit from putting themselves in the other person's shoes more often. I believe it's really important to try your hardest to understand why the person you are debating with has the view point that they do.
It's also import to recognise your own bias. Everyone thinks that their view points are correct, it's human nature to feel this way. Recognising that you might not be correct even if you strongly feel like you are is a strong skill to have.
Probably the hardest, yet most important skill to have. It's the only practical way to keep improving yourself.