Question
How do I practice good questions?
Quick Answer
Open your notes or knowledge system. Find three claims or facts you've stored recently. For each one, write the question it answers — and then write a second question it raises but doesn't resolve. You now have three answered atoms and three open atoms. Notice which set feels more generative.
The most direct way to practice good questions is through a focused exercise: Open your notes or knowledge system. Find three claims or facts you've stored recently. For each one, write the question it answers — and then write a second question it raises but doesn't resolve. You now have three answered atoms and three open atoms. Notice which set feels more generative.
Common pitfall: Storing only answers — highlights, summaries, conclusions — and never capturing the questions that drove you to the material in the first place. The result is a knowledge base full of dead endpoints. No tension, no open loops, no reason to return. Your system becomes an archive instead of an engine.
This practice connects to Phase 2 (Atomicity and Decomposition) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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