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A list of reflective questions to ask yourself
Antifragile
Availability bias
Black Swan
Bottlenecks
Cause and Effect
Compound Interest
Confirmation Bias
Create momentum to make progress
Emergence
Environment Design
Every field has some core principles and ideas upon which all other derive
Evolution
Excellence is mundane
Fail Fast So You Can Fix Early
Feedback Loop
First instinct fallacy
Force multiplier
Free Rider Problem
Friction
Gall's Law
Hanlon's Razor
Haskell
Hickam's Dictum
Hindsight Bias
How to Acquire Mental Models
Increase your leverage to become more productive
Innovation Multiplier
Inversion
Leverage
Local maxima vs. Global maxima
Mario Marketing
Mental Models
Metcalfe's Law
Minimize time getting into position, just go
Mise en place
Network Effects
Not making time for yourself first leads to burnout
Occam's Razor
Opportunity Cost
Overton windows
Perverse Incentive
Positive Sum
Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc Fallacy
PP 1 - Introduction to Haskell
PP 2 - Types and classes
PP 3 - Functions and lists
PP 4 - Recursion
PP 5 - Higher-order functions
PP 6 - Declaring types and type classes
Premature Optimization
Reciprocity
Regression to the Mean
Sharpen the saw
Sherlock Holmes and Mental Models
Signal vs. Noise
Skin in the Game
Stop being ungrateful of having so little life, and be grateful that you were given any at all
Survivorship bias
Take on the role before you can assume the role
The Barbell Strategy
The Diderot Effect
The Dunning-Kruger Effect
The Feature-Positive Effect
The Ivy Lee Method for daily planning
The Law of Inertia
The Lindy Effect
The Map Is Not The Territory
The Mere-Exposure Effect
The Pareto Principle
The Pauli Exclusion Principle
The Pratfall Effect
The QEC method
The Red Queen Effect
Theory of Constraints
To catch a second wind, you have to stay in the game long enough
Using notes to advance in life
Via Negativa
Wittgenstein's Ruler
Working on vs. working in
Your second brain should actively grow and compound
Zero Sum
The Law of Inertia
Things in motion tend to stay in motion. Things at rest tend to stay at rest.
Incoming links:
Create momentum to make progress
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Mental Models
Home
Go to main site
The Law of Inertia
Things in motion tend to stay in motion. Things at rest tend to stay at rest.
Incoming links:
Create momentum to make progress
,
Mental Models