Some people never go out into the real world and try to do diverse things- they just read books.
I was salesman, a nuclear researcher at a national lab, A q/a q/c tech. a laser technician, a CEO, a manufacturing manager, a skin cancer research associate for 4 years working with 2 major universities, a post grad teacher of engineering studemts-
did EXPERIMENTS from ` 1980 to 1990`s on plant ionic fluidic electrochemistries- a marketing manager, a distribution saleman etc
One does not appear to not to have any real world experience in the real govt., business and corporate ladder world at all- and it ain`t me- Sorry but humanity cannot be pigeon holed.
My sister was a organic lab experimenter for 10 years, raised horses, became a head of govt agency enforcement- taught university- she conducted experiments but was never an introvert-
My other sister was water pollution control lab researcher and did experiments for 15 years= she ain`t no introvert lemme tellya
.What a bunch of BS s being proffered here...
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Nothing you have said in any way negates the influence of genetics on a person’s personality or preferences. In fact, you are providing a great example of just how different people are from each other—which would not be the case if genetics did not determine our basic personalities. Just the fact that you seem to think that the prospect of earning lots of money is enough to turn anyone into a salesperson, while I can’t imagine *any* incentive compelling enough to want to go into sales illustrates that concept quite clearly.
Isn’t it the case that people buy certain breeds of dogs because they want specific temperaments in their pets? How would that work, if temperament were not genetically determined?
BTW, just because my life experiences are different than yours does not mean that I have no experience in the real world. I have plenty of real-world experience, thank you very much.