language and thought
The reason I've spent so long establishing this rather obvious point
is that it leads to another that many people will find shocking.
If writing down your ideas always makes them more precise and more
complete, then no one who hasn't written about a topic has fully
formed ideas about it. And someone who never writes has no fully
formed ideas about... See more
is that it leads to another that many people will find shocking.
If writing down your ideas always makes them more precise and more
complete, then no one who hasn't written about a topic has fully
formed ideas about it. And someone who never writes has no fully
formed ideas about... See more
Paul Graham • Putting Ideas into Words
Once you publish something, the convention is that whatever you
wrote was what you thought before you wrote it. These were your
ideas, and now you've expressed them. But you know this isn't true.
You know that putting your ideas into words changed them. And not
just the ideas you published. Presumably there were others that
turned out to be too broken... See more
wrote was what you thought before you wrote it. These were your
ideas, and now you've expressed them. But you know this isn't true.
You know that putting your ideas into words changed them. And not
just the ideas you published. Presumably there were others that
turned out to be too broken... See more
Paul Graham • Putting Ideas into Words
Tetel-Andresen writes in her book that she gives students an assignment: Draw how you visualize the sequence of months.
Pause your reading and think about what you would draw.
For me, time is constantly flowing. The present month, July 2022, will soon be part of the past.
I drew a timeline, which started with the current month and extended into the... See more
Pause your reading and think about what you would draw.
For me, time is constantly flowing. The present month, July 2022, will soon be part of the past.
I drew a timeline, which started with the current month and extended into the... See more