>>30579251Why train your hammer, when you're abler with a screwdriver?
In other words: then human nature (regardless of intelligence) comes into play. If you're crap at something, odds are you won't train it at all. You'll solve problems where it could help with other skills you're better at, even if sub-optimal for the problem in question.
So people with crap judgment of characters of other people in general will avoid judging at all, and will instead focus on observing.
But again: I need to fix this shit. I'm not using the above as excuse, just explaining why it happens on abstract terms.
>>30579316Your choice of words reminds me a lot Miggs-Bryer types.
I disagree though - social interactions are trained by the activity itself, just like any other activity. If you're exhausted by the presence of people, odds are you'll interact less with other people than someone who's energized by social interaction...