The Conflict of What We Desire to Do and What We Are Able to Do
What if someone who had the potential to discover a formula to unlock the mysteries of the universe wanted to become a pulp fiction writer?
What if someone who had the potential to create unparalleled gastronomic delicacies had his heart set on civil engineering?
There is what we desire to do, and what we are able to do. When those two things don't coincide, which path should we pursue to find happiness?
Notes:
Folksonomies: purpose
Taxonomies:
/careers/career planning (0.649289)
/finance/grants, scholarships and financial aid/scholarships (0.149522)
/science/engineering (0.118031)
Keywords:
unparalleled gastronomic delicacies (0.979565 (positive:0.522930)), pulp fiction writer (0.869848 (negative:-0.467211)), civil engineering (0.570829 (positive:0.522930)), potential (0.398515 (positive:0.055719)), formula (0.389048 (negative:-0.467211)), mysteries (0.388437 (negative:-0.467211)), Conflict (0.387411 (negative:-0.467211)), happiness (0.386617 (positive:0.484508)), path (0.376167 (positive:0.484508)), things (0.352407 (neutral:0.000000))
Entities:
civil engineering:FieldTerminology (0.950599 (positive:0.522930)), writer:JobTitle (0.839510 (negative:-0.467211))
Concepts:
Universe (0.949819): dbpedia | freebase
Genre fiction (0.899044): dbpedia | freebase | yago
Civil engineering (0.882972): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Engineering (0.823710): dbpedia | freebase
Professional Engineer (0.784607): dbpedia
Physics (0.716778): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Infrastructure (0.699410): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Force (0.659243): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc

