Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 6402 answers
Most people are wrong about how they spend their attention — measure it.
Practice describing facts before applying labels like good bad right or wrong.
Practice describing facts before applying labels like good bad right or wrong.
Facts are observable events — stories are the narratives you construct around them.
Facts are observable events — stories are the narratives you construct around them.
Evaluation has its place — after you have thoroughly observed.
Evaluation has its place — after you have thoroughly observed.
Evaluations you make so often that you no longer notice them are the most dangerous.
Every pattern has a trigger — identifying the trigger is the key to changing the pattern.
Patterns in how your patterns form and dissolve — meta-patterns — are especially valuable.
Your past successes share common elements that you can deliberately replicate.
Your past successes share common elements that you can deliberately replicate.
Your past successes share common elements that you can deliberately replicate.
Not every recurring event is meaningful — some repetitions are coincidental.
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 Some is obsolete by lunch.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.
Instead of blocking noise, create systems that actively surface what matters.
Regularly audit what you consume and cut sources that produce more noise than signal. Without scheduled review, your information environment silently degrades — and you adapt to the noise without noticing.
Your emotions do not add random noise to perception — they warp it in predictable, measurable directions. Anxiety inflates threats. Euphoria shrinks risks. Anger manufactures certainty. Once you know the direction of the distortion, you can correct for it.
Under stress your perceptual field contracts — you see less, process less, and mistake the narrow slice you do perceive for the whole picture. Recognizing this contraction is the first step to correcting it.
Actively looking for evidence against your current belief is the fastest path to calibration.
Information has no inherent meaning. Meaning is constructed at the intersection of information and context. Change the context, and the same data, sentence, or signal means something entirely different.
What was true in one time period may not be true in another — always note the when.
Your emotional state when you perceive something becomes part of what you perceive.
Who you are with when you process information influences what you conclude.