Question
How do I practice temporal context?
Quick Answer
For one week, keep a Temporal Audit Log. Every time you encounter a claim, recommendation, or piece of advice — in a book, article, conversation, or your own memory — write down three things: (1) the claim itself, (2) when it was established or when the source was produced, and (3) what has.
The most direct way to practice temporal context is through a focused exercise: For one week, keep a Temporal Audit Log. Every time you encounter a claim, recommendation, or piece of advice — in a book, article, conversation, or your own memory — write down three things: (1) the claim itself, (2) when it was established or when the source was produced, and (3) what has changed since then that might alter its validity. Aim for at least two entries per day across different domains: one professional, one personal. At the end of the week, review your log and count how many claims you were treating as timeless that actually had significant temporal dependencies. That count is a direct measure of how much temporal context you are currently ignoring in your thinking.
Common pitfall: The most dangerous failure mode is not recognizing outdated information — it is treating all information as either timeless or expired, with no middle ground. Some people overcorrect by dismissing anything older than a year as irrelevant. Others never update at all and operate on knowledge from a decade ago. Both are temporal context failures. The first discards the Lindy-tested wisdom that has survived precisely because it works across eras. The second ignores the half-life of facts — the empirically measurable rate at which knowledge in any given field becomes obsolete. Calibrated temporal reasoning means asking not "is this old?" but "what kind of knowledge is this, and what is its expected half-life in the current environment?"
This practice connects to Phase 9 (Context Sensitivity) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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