Saved by Tanuj
Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
If you have more categories, you can categorise things better. I think building these categories is worthwhile. Having a common name for a situation is a chunk you can unpack when needed. That’s what all adages, aphorisms, and proverbs are.
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
The better your vocabulary, the more aware you become about possible categorization errors.
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
Beware though. Don’t confuse knowing the name of something with knowing something.
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
This is what mental models are: ideas from diverse fields that can aid your life. In this sense, improving vocabulary is a meta mental model. It’s a way of finding and organising new mental models.
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
"Knowing where an idea doesn’t fit can be just as valuable as knowing where it fits."
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
Mastering these categories and where they apply will take time and experience. However, knowing the contradictions in each category helps master the category better. We’re using inversion to define the limits of the category.
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
Sometimes, knowing the name is good enough. Most cognitive biases work that way. Once you find out what availability bias is, you can figure out where you’ve fallen for it. Noticing availability bias without knowing it is much harder. It’s the same for emotions, ideas, design patterns, and specific situations in life. Having a name helps you notice... See more
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
The better your vocabulary, the more stories you can chunk, the more experiences you can pattern match.
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
Names are excellent for creating larger chunks, since when done right, they pack lots of information into a single sentence.
Neil Kakkar • Vocabulary as a Meta Mental Model
Knowing the name of this idea gives you a scaffolding to hang your mind on. The name triggers the example in your mind.