Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 1112 answers
Capture and organization are separate cognitive operations. Merging them creates friction that kills both: you lose the thought while searching for where to put it.
Moving information out of your head frees working memory for higher-order processing. Cognitive offloading is not laziness — it is how minds were designed to operate when paired with tools.
Moving information out of your head frees working memory for higher-order processing. Cognitive offloading is not laziness — it is how minds were designed to operate when paired with tools.
Moving information out of your head frees working memory for higher-order processing. Cognitive offloading is not laziness — it is how minds were designed to operate when paired with tools.
Not all thoughts decay at the same rate. A fleeting architectural insight has minutes before it degrades beyond recovery. A stable reference fact has weeks. Treating every thought with the same urgency — or the same patience — guarantees you lose the wrong ones.
Not all thoughts decay at the same rate. A fleeting architectural insight has minutes before it degrades beyond recovery. A stable reference fact has weeks. Treating every thought with the same urgency — or the same patience — guarantees you lose the wrong ones.
Not all thoughts decay at the same rate. A fleeting architectural insight has minutes before it degrades beyond recovery. A stable reference fact has weeks. Treating every thought with the same urgency — or the same patience — guarantees you lose the wrong ones.
A capture habit is the practice of immediately externalizing thoughts, ideas, and observations into a persistent medium before your memory loses them.
No productivity or thinking system works without a reliable capture reflex. The system is not the bottleneck — the habit that feeds it is.
No productivity or thinking system works without a reliable capture reflex. The system is not the bottleneck — the habit that feeds it is.
No productivity or thinking system works without a reliable capture reflex. The system is not the bottleneck — the habit that feeds it is.
No productivity or thinking system works without a reliable capture reflex. The system is not the bottleneck — the habit that feeds it is.
The act of writing generates new thoughts rather than merely documenting existing ones. Writing is not transcription — it is the primary mechanism through which vague intuitions become precise understanding.
Your inner voice summarizes and distorts more than it faithfully represents. What you hear in your head is a compressed fragment of what you actually think — stripped of nuance, missing subjects, and riddled with systematic distortions you cannot detect from inside.
Your inner voice summarizes and distorts more than it faithfully represents. What you hear in your head is a compressed fragment of what you actually think — stripped of nuance, missing subjects, and riddled with systematic distortions you cannot detect from inside.
Paying attention to a thought alters its content and emotional charge. You cannot observe your own thinking without changing it — and that change is not a bug. It is the mechanism by which self-awareness becomes self-intervention.
A rough note you actually make is infinitely more valuable than a polished note you do not.
A rough note you actually make is infinitely more valuable than a polished note you do not.
Your mind narrates continuously but only some of that narration contains actionable signal. Most of your mental content is reruns — repetitive, self-referential, habitual. Learning to tell the difference is the first act of cognitive filtering.
Your mind narrates continuously but only some of that narration contains actionable signal. Most of your mental content is reruns — repetitive, self-referential, habitual. Learning to tell the difference is the first act of cognitive filtering.
Your mind narrates continuously but only some of that narration contains actionable signal. Most of your mental content is reruns — repetitive, self-referential, habitual. Learning to tell the difference is the first act of cognitive filtering.
Written commitments create a feedback loop that mental commitments cannot. The act of externalizing a commitment transforms it from a fleeting intention into a persistent object that holds you accountable across time.
Written commitments create a feedback loop that mental commitments cannot. The act of externalizing a commitment transforms it from a fleeting intention into a persistent object that holds you accountable across time.
Written commitments create a feedback loop that mental commitments cannot. The act of externalizing a commitment transforms it from a fleeting intention into a persistent object that holds you accountable across time.