Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 6 answers
List three to five schemas you are currently trying to integrate into a coherent framework — beliefs about work, relationships, learning, or any domain where you are actively building understanding. For each schema, rate on a scale of 1 to 5 how easily it connects to the others (1 = constant.
Pick one value you publicly claim — health, family time, creative work, learning, honesty, whatever you say matters most. Now audit the last seven days of your actual behavior: your calendar, your screen time, your spending, your energy allocation. Score the consistency from 1 (completely.
Identify a contradiction you're currently holding — two beliefs that seem to oppose each other. Write each one as a clear, standalone statement. Now ask: under what conditions is each one true? Write the conditions down. Then draft a synthesis statement that preserves the truth from both by.
Take a blank page and list 10 decisions you've made in the last year — large and small, across work, relationships, health, money, and creativity. For each one, write one sentence about why you made that choice. Now look for repetition: which underlying reasons appear more than once? Circle the.
Choose a domain you know well — management, cooking, fitness, software, parenting. Write down 8-10 principles or rules you follow in that domain, one per line. Now pick a second domain you know well and do the same. Place the two lists side by side. Draw lines between any principles that are.
Take two schemas you currently hold that feel contradictory — maybe 'I should plan carefully' and 'I should trust my intuition.' Write each one out fully, including the contexts where it works best and the evidence supporting it. Now attempt to integrate them. Write down your first integration.