Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 4568 answers
Mistaking this lesson for a warning about other people. You read it, nod, think of someone else who consumes too much news and understands too little — and feel a warm glow of metacognitive superiority. That glow is itself the illusion operating in real time. The illusion of understanding is not.
Consuming lots of low-quality information makes you feel informed while understanding less. Familiarity masquerades as comprehension, and volume masquerades as depth.
Temporarily cutting off information inputs clarifies which ones you actually need — and resets the neural machinery that distinguishes signal from noise.
Temporarily cutting off information inputs clarifies which ones you actually need — and resets the neural machinery that distinguishes signal from noise.
Temporarily cutting off information inputs clarifies which ones you actually need — and resets the neural machinery that distinguishes signal from noise.
Temporarily cutting off information inputs clarifies which ones you actually need — and resets the neural machinery that distinguishes signal from noise.
Temporarily cutting off information inputs clarifies which ones you actually need — and resets the neural machinery that distinguishes signal from noise.
Choose one 24-hour period this week for an information fast. No social media, no news, no newsletters, no podcasts, no articles. You can still communicate with people directly (calls, texts, in-person conversation) — the fast targets passive consumption, not human connection. Before you begin,.
Treating information fasting as a one-time cleanse rather than a periodic practice. A single fast produces a temporary insight. Repeated fasts — weekly, monthly, or quarterly — compound into a permanently sharper signal filter. The other failure mode: filling the fast with a different form of.
Temporarily cutting off information inputs clarifies which ones you actually need — and resets the neural machinery that distinguishes signal from noise.
Different types of information decay at different rates. Some knowledge stays relevant for centuries. Some is obsolete by lunch. Knowing which is which changes what you pay attention to.
Different types of information decay at different rates. Some knowledge stays relevant for centuries. Some is obsolete by lunch. Knowing which is which changes what you pay attention to.
Open whatever you read yesterday — your inbox, your feed, your bookmarks. Sort every piece of content you consumed into one of three buckets: (1) irrelevant within a week, (2) useful for months, (3) useful for years or longer. Count how many items land in each bucket. If bucket one is the largest,.
Treating all information as equally durable — giving a trending tweet the same cognitive weight as a foundational principle. You will know this is happening when your notes are full of references that mean nothing six months later, when your 'insights' folder is a graveyard of ideas that felt.
Different types of information decay at different rates. Some knowledge stays relevant for centuries. Some is obsolete by lunch. Knowing which is which changes what you pay attention to.
Each piece of signal you accumulate makes the next piece more valuable — noise does the opposite.
Each piece of signal you accumulate makes the next piece more valuable — noise does the opposite.
Each piece of signal you accumulate makes the next piece more valuable — noise does the opposite.
Each piece of signal you accumulate makes the next piece more valuable — noise does the opposite.
Pick a domain you've been learning for at least six months. Draw two columns: Signal (concepts that connected to other things you knew and changed how you think or act) and Noise (content you consumed that you can't recall or that never connected to anything). Count the items in each column. Now.
Treating all learning as equal. Reading ten disconnected blog posts feels like 'compounding knowledge' because the volume is high. But volume without connection is accumulation, not compounding. The test is not 'did I consume something new?' but 'did the new thing connect to something I already.
Each piece of signal you accumulate makes the next piece more valuable — noise does the opposite.
Instead of blocking noise, create systems that actively surface what matters.
Instead of blocking noise, create systems that actively surface what matters.