Sunday, April 7, 2019

The Best “Common Sense” Quotes of “Digital Master” Apr. 2019

Common sense in many situations is found to have been based on some usefulness, but it is often deficient on why or how.

"Digital Master” is the series of guidebooks (27+ books) to perceive the multi-faceted impact digital is making to the businesses and society, help forward-thinking organizations navigate through the journey in a systematic way, and avoid “rogue digital.” It perceives the emergent trends of digital leadership, advises on how to run a digital organization to unleash its full potential and improve agility, maturity, and provide insight about Change Management. It also instructs the digital workforce on how to shape a game-changing digital mindset and build the right set of digital capabilities to compete for the future. Here is a set of “Common Sense” quotes in “Digital Master.







1 Common sense is an accumulated experience from day to day activities. All the implicit knowledge of a particular social and cultural environment belongs to common sense.

2 Common sense is neither oxymoron nor absolute truth. For Common Sense, each individual has a different set of information that makes the base of thinking turning into action.

3 A common sense in a local group is perhaps totally odd in a global environment.

4 A wise person with common sense can become wiser, but a narrow-minded one may become even more closed-minded due to a misunderstanding of common sense.

5 Common Sense = Self-Esteem (sharing of useful information within a social group) + Critical Thinking + Predicting Consequences (with an emphasis on sustaining desired outcomes).

6 Learning common sense requires restructuring brain tissues to first think logically, and with accurate predicting of consequences.

7 Everyone 'knows' you can't teach common sense. But everyone 'knows' you can learn it.

8 Common sense in many situations is found to have been based on some usefulness, but it is often deficient on why or how.

9 “Common sense” is about interpreting experience to “think fast,” while systems thinking helps us focus on careful reasoning by “thinking slow.”

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