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by barrkel
3262 days ago
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Values != policies; the way you put them in a stroke relationship makes me think that you think they're related. They're not. The point of an inversion test for values is to see if they have any information content (i.e. can act as a discriminator between companies). If the inversion of a value is something that you'd obviously not do, then it's not actually a value; it's just something that normal people should do. Policies are like this. If a policy is inverted and it sounds absurd or criminal, that's ok - policies are hard rules that define normal behaviour. But if a value is inverted and it sounds absurd, it's not actually a value. Policies are a dividing line between acceptable and unacceptable behaviour. Values suggest an inclination or bias between two acceptable behaviours. The reason it's important to distinguish between them is that high-level policies, whether stated explicitly or not, are by and large the same at every company (precisely because their inverse is abnormal or ridiculous); values, on the other hand, make companies distinct. Reading about a company's policies won't tell you whether it's a good place to work or not, although reading between the lines of what they assert their policies to be, may give you a clue as to their values. |
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I will just quote one line. You write:
>Reading about a company's policies won't tell you whether it's a good place to work or not.
which is one of the most absurd things I've ever read. I don't see how we can engage in meaningful conversation, sorry. We can just drop it.
I just realized that in another comment you called me "silly" but we can just agree that we have very different viewpoints. We view these matters completely differently.