>> Life is not binary. I will never be a pro athlete yet I can enjoy doing sports.
Sure, but what if someone did a genetic test at this point and told you that your genetics would have made you a world class something-or-other? You missed your calling, how would that make you feel? For others it might help justify a failure and cause them to give up.
For a lot of people, life is a journey of discovery and pushing limits. We've seen that telling people they're inherently good at something can make them underachieve due to reduced effort. Giving people preconceived notions of who they are can be as harmful as giving them false hope.
Probably not the first opportunity I would miss in life, and I guess I would probably have above expected metrics in some other field. There's no reason to overthink it.
>For others it might help justify a failure and cause them to give up. /
For a lot of people, life is a journey of discovery and pushing limits.
Yes, people are different. It would help some, it would bring other down. It's not an obligation so I don't see the harm there.
Life is not binary. I will never be a pro athlete yet I can enjoy doing sports.