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Personality test

April 20 2004 at 9:06 PM
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Riley  (Login pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis)

 

http://www.flowgo.com/funpages/view.cfm/2567

Apparently I am:

  • Analytical
  • Trustworthy
  • Self-Assured

 
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Peter Hockey
(Login Locke21)

Re: Personality test

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April 20 2004, 9:43 PM 

I got the same, and i would actually consider its "description of me" as true, I am an honest guy, unless being honest hurts someone. i am self assured, and value culture over many things.

 
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(Login CPGKeyca)

Re: Personality test

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April 20 2004, 11:55 PM 

Boo. Can't copy and paste...

I am: 1) Introspective, 2) Sensitive, & 3) Reflective. I didn't know what introspective meant, but after reading my full description I have a basic idea, but if anyone has a dictonary on hand, or knows, care to fill me in lol?

"You come to grips more frequantly & throoughly with yourself and your environment then do most people. You detest superficiality; you'd rather be alone then have to suffer through small talk. But your relationships with your friends are highly intensive, which gives you the inner tranquility and harmony that you need to feel good. However it is no problem for you to be alone for extended periods of time, without being board."

Okay, that really does fit me. I really hate small talk with people. I am extremely close to my friends. I hate people lol. I am never board when I'm alone (just ask the voice in my head that I talk to!). ...Just kidding about the last part for anyone who took that seriously lol.



http://www.keycasplace.tk

"Let's all play a game of hangman! Now who should we hang"? ~Riley

"If you don't finish that crud on your plate, you won't get any crap for desert" ~Dan on the show Roseanne
"I don't boss Dan around. I'm trying to put him in touch with his submissive side" ~Roseanne

CPGKeyca = AIM
Keycas Place = AOL

 
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(Login CPGKeyca)

Re: Personality test

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April 21 2004, 12:11 AM 

Okay, sorry for posting twice in a row. I'm talking to Andi over IM right now. We decided to number them 1-9, left to right, top row before bottom. If you do that then I would say numbers 3 & 4 do not fit me. The others do fit me (some not 100% but for the most part do). Andi says 1 & 2 don't fit him. But I was going on the paragraph descriptions and not really the 3 words, he went on the 3 words and didn't read the paragraphs. We have established we have multiple personalities tonight. Anyone else?

http://www.keycasplace.tk

"Let's all play a game of hangman! Now who should we hang"? ~Riley

"If you don't finish that crud on your plate, you won't get any crap for desert" ~Dan on the show Roseanne
"I don't boss Dan around. I'm trying to put him in touch with his submissive side" ~Roseanne

CPGKeyca = AIM
Keycas Place = AOL

 
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(Login Helenwulfgar)
Moderators

Re: Personality test

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April 21 2004, 5:43 AM 

Just to let you know, there is no bloody chance in hell a frickin' picture is going to determine your personality.



 
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Locke
(Login Locke21)

Re: Personality test

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April 21 2004, 6:13 AM 

Just like there is no bloody change that the relativity theory is right, when it wasn't even proven when einstien thought it up. And there is no bloody chance...

Just saying, "its possible".

 
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Sandy
(Login liturgist)
Moderators

Re: Personality test

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April 21 2004, 11:57 AM 

Locke, that was a silly thing to say.  The Theory of Relativity is just that.  A THEORY based on extensive mathmatical calculations.  There is a lot of basis for it.  Now, it is still considered a theory because you can't (at least not yet) sufficiently test it to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that it is true.  The "Law" of Gravity is considered a law because there has never been any contradictory idicators.  The use of the terms 'law' and 'theory' are carefully chosen and adheared to in scientific research.  It is a hypothesis if it has nothing to back it up, as yet.  Once there has been experimentation to back it up (in this case, a complex series of mathmatical calculations) it is considered a theory.

This picture 'test' is cute and may be fun to play around with, but it is crap when it comes to accuracy.  You may have coincidentally selected a picture accompanied by a description which you feel is like yourself.  However, as it happens, Chris and I had the same response.  Would you say Chris and I have the same personality?  This claims all sorts of testing and that it was developed by a psychologist, but I notice they don't say who or what sort of testing. 

Helen has a degree in psychology and I have a psychology minor.  When she says this is bogus, she is speaking with good information.

 



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


http://www.schnoogle.com/authorLinks/Sandy_Phoenix
http://www.fanfiction.net/read.php?storyid=1461584

 
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(Login Helenwulfgar)
Moderators

Re: Personality test

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April 21 2004, 3:01 PM 

Just as a biologist, Sandy can very well comment on theories vs. law.

Here's how I selected my picture- I picked the first one on the page. I didn't go for the one that appealed to me, or the one I thought was cute...just picked the first one on the page. To say this is "possibly" a good test is to suggest your subconsious made the accurate choice for you...and not even Freud would buy that crap related to an arbitrary selection.



 
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Christina
(Login clg64)

Testing Einstein's Theory of Relativity

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April 22 2004, 10:54 AM 

Here you go, Locke!!!

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=570&ncid=753&e=4&u=/nm/20040420/sc_nm/space_gravity_dc

And Sandy and Helen are right- it's a Theory- not a Dogma (like DNA is the material responsible for inheritence), not a Law (like Gravity). It means it has no evidence to prove it wrong, and a lot of evidence pointing to it being right. And in science, you never 'prove' anything- you just support claims.

NASA Launches Einstein Experiment from California
Tue Apr 20, 1:27 PM ET
Add Science - Reuters to My Yahoo!
By Broward Liston
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) -
Forty-five years in the making and 24 hours late, NASA (news - web sites) launched a $700 million satellite into orbit on Tuesday to test Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity.
The Gravity Probe B, one of the most precise scientific instruments every built, was carried aloft by a Boeing Co. Delta 2 at 12:57 p.m. EDT from the rocket range at California's Vandenberg Air Force Base.
A day earlier, launch directors from Boeing and NASA's Kennedy Space Center (news - web sites) in Florida scrubbed the launch in the final minutes of the countdown when there was a problem loading software.
Einstein developed his mind-bending theories of relativity in the early 20th century, and today those theories are generally accepted, especially as they find their way into applications such as medical scanners and the Global Positioning System.
Among the most exotic of Einstein's predictions was that massive bodies -- planets, stars or black holes -- actually twist time and space around as they spin, much like the winds of a tornado.
Other tenets of general relativity have been tested, such as the warping of time and space by massive bodies, but the twisting effect, known as frame dragging, has never been put to the test, project scientists said.
If Einstein is right, scientists say, the satellite should detect that small bits of time and space are actually missing from each orbit, something indiscernible to orbiting astronauts but measurable nonetheless.
"I call it the missing inch," said the program's chief scientist, Francis Everitt, a theoretical physicist from Stanford University, where the mission was first conceived in 1959, then funded in 1964. Not until the 1990s were engineers from Stanford and NASA able to build a satellite precise enough to make the measurement.
The heart of the 3.5-ton satellite is a container holding four spheres the size of ping pong balls that will be chilled to near absolute zero and spun 10,000 times a minute, making them the most accurate gyroscopes ever built.
"There are two reasons why these are the most perfect gyroscopes. They're the most perfect spheres (ever manufactured) and going into space allows you to make enormously more accurate gyroscopes than is possible on the ground," Everitt said.
The satellite, which was inserted into a polar orbit, will spend two months getting ready, then 16 months making measurements.
Mission scientists hope they will not only have proof about Einstein's theory, but a precise number for calibrating the effect.
Although the effect is hard to measure around something Earth-sized, it can be quite dramatic around something as massive as a black hole, where this frame dragging may account for quasars, the most violent eruptions of energy ever detected.

 
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Sammi
(Login sammi-black)

Re: Testing Einstein's Theory of Relativity

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April 25 2004, 4:09 PM 

I got-


INTROSPECTIVE
SENSITIVE
REFLECTIVE

What does introspective and reflective mean??

 
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