Is it possible that unconscious competence is the point where the action
is habitual, the point where it is a paradigm and a person is no longer
open to new inputs. Is it possible that this is the point where Senge's
ladder of inference takes one to a perviously drawn conclusion? The point
where if it looks like something seen before it is not necessary to look
at this.
Perhaps unconscious competence is relat4ed to bull headed and closed
minded.
Gene
At 10:24 AM 10/19/98 -0500, you wrote:
>I worked for Wilson Learning Corporation many years ago where we
>popularized the four-step "conscious competence" model in sales training
>programs written in the early 1960's.
Eugene Taurman
interLinx ilx@execpc.com http://www.execpc.com/~ilx
What you are is determined by the thoughts that dominate your mind.
Paraphrase of Proverbs Ch 23 vs 7 KJV
--Eugene Taurman <ilx@execpc.com>
Learning-org -- Hosted by Rick Karash <rkarash@karash.com> Public Dialog on Learning Organizations -- <http://www.learning-org.com>