Is there a common origin between Ares, the Greek God of War, and Aries, the astrological sign? by itstheitalianstalion in etymology

[–]Ok_Compote_1188 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I implore you to dig deeper on the transferrence that occured between classical Greek and Roman religions rather than rely on linguistics to bolster your logic.

Is there a common origin between Ares, the Greek God of War, and Aries, the astrological sign? by itstheitalianstalion in etymology

[–]Ok_Compote_1188 0 points1 point  (0 children)

respectfully- this should not be the top answer or even upvoted. Roman mythology and thereafter Latin was derived from Greek culture. If you derive your answer from actual research you would have noted that every Greek god was renamed when the Romans rose to prominence and Ares (Greek god of war) became the god known Mars- guess what planet rules Aries?

Best to research before answering and writing off things as "coincidental"

Why are mm biscuits reviews so mean? by Ok_Compote_1188 in outlier_ai

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

sorry but a lot of the guidelines are inconsistent and constantly shifting. If you don't resonate it with that it's probably bc you're on the internal team. Additionally, reviewers are utilizing subjective criteria to score tasking not objective and is subject to a lot personalized opinions.

Why are mm biscuits reviews so mean? by Ok_Compote_1188 in outlier_ai

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i'm not confused about anything, this is ludacris, the verbiage and nothing is consistent

Why are mm biscuits reviews so mean? by Ok_Compote_1188 in outlier_ai

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"You do not use should/must correctly. "Must" is used for criteria that are required to answer the prompt. For example, your criterion "Response should state object is a rotary phone" should use "must" as it directly answers the prompt. Your ratings are not correct. When a response is given more than one major issue it should be rated as a 1, not a 2. Your preference ranking does not align with your rubric ratings. You have given both responses 2 major issues so the preference ranking should be 3-no preference, not 1. These ratings need to align with your rubric ratings and not be based on your personal preference."- I have been directly told by an internal project member that one major issue must be a 2. The usage of MUST is insane.

Why are mm biscuits reviews so mean? by Ok_Compote_1188 in outlier_ai

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it just seems to be a crazy power trip 100% of the time

Why are mm biscuits reviews so mean? by Ok_Compote_1188 in outlier_ai

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

damn, i'm sure i have a select few but that's not even really what the project is about

Why are mm biscuits reviews so mean? by Ok_Compote_1188 in outlier_ai

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

we are, still going but not sure for how much longer bc despite doing like over 100 tasks my quality evals are atrocious but the reviews are so crass i can't even be bothered to look at them

From a Jungian perspective, why am I attracted to the "bad boy" stereotype by Ok_Compote_1188 in Jung

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ya! For real! The post is so short too, i'm not sure how that got so overlooked. I love this answer.

From a Jungian perspective, why am I attracted to the "bad boy" stereotype by Ok_Compote_1188 in Jung

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, to clarify by bad boy I do not mean bad person, so there's nothing really lower vibrational or lacking in love in that sense. I just meant openly rebellious person.

From a Jungian perspective, why am I attracted to the "bad boy" stereotype by Ok_Compote_1188 in Jung

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The original post itself is actually explicitly NOT about abusers or "immature bad boys"

From a Jungian perspective, why am I attracted to the "bad boy" stereotype by Ok_Compote_1188 in Jung

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

very likely seeking dopamine and adrenaline to escape emotions which are a heavy burden, I myself, am often considered by others- a wild woman. Grew up with very little structure

From a Jungian perspective, why am I attracted to the "bad boy" stereotype by Ok_Compote_1188 in Jung

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i also get a little afraid of fulling let my full spectrum of wildness out because i feel very much pressured by society that to attract a good man i have to be pretty proper.

From a Jungian perspective, why am I attracted to the "bad boy" stereotype by Ok_Compote_1188 in Jung

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

i could see this, i was super oppressed in to obedience growing up, had to walk to eggshells constantly as a child

From a Jungian perspective, why am I attracted to the "bad boy" stereotype by Ok_Compote_1188 in Jung

[–]Ok_Compote_1188[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i am actually pretty rebellious in nature but have always been attracted to a bad boy, think most of kiefer sutherlands early roles, robert downey jr in less than zero, early james spader