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Thought Provoking
Dan Fikes • 1 card
Thought provoke
Claudia Robiou • 1 card
Indie thoughts
Johnathan Dodson • 49 cards
Descartes’ axiom that “I think, therefore I am” has, in our modern world, become “I am what I think,” so it is easy to see how thoughts can have an ever-powerful influence over our feelings and actions.
Judy PhD Ho • Stop Self-Sabotage: Six Steps to Unlock Your True Motivation, Harness Your Willpower, and Get Out of Your Own Way
Second-Order Thinking
Second-order thinking is a method of thinking that goes beyond the surface level, beyond the knee-jerk reactions and short-term gains. It asks us to play the long game, to anticipate the ripple effects of our actions, and to make choices that will benefit us not just today but in the months and years to come.
Second-order t... See more
Second-order thinking is a method of thinking that goes beyond the surface level, beyond the knee-jerk reactions and short-term gains. It asks us to play the long game, to anticipate the ripple effects of our actions, and to make choices that will benefit us not just today but in the months and years to come.
Second-order t... See more
fs.blog • Mental Models: The Best Way to Make Intelligent Decisions
Thought provoking
Asher Raymond • 1 card
Thought provoking
Max Ackerman • 1 card
Thought provoking
Celia Velez Ortega • 1 card
Here are some ways to put second-order thinking into practice today.
- Always ask yourself, “And then what?”
- Think across time — What do the consequences look like in 10 minutes? 10 months? 10 Years?
- Create templates like the second image above with 1st, 2nd, and 3rd order consequences. Identify your decision, think it through, and write down the conseq