Farnam Street: A System for Remembering What you Read |
A System for Remembering What you Read Posted: 07 May 2014 05:00 AM PDT Last year, I read 161 books cover-to-cover. And that doesn’t include the ones that I started to read and put down. I learned a lot in the process about what works and what doesn’t work. I have a system that I use for non-fiction books that enables me to remember quite a bit. And when I can’t remember I generally know where to look to find the answers. Here are some of the tips that work for me:
But one thing that most people don’t appreciate enough is that what you read makes a huge difference for how well you remember things. We fail to remember a lot of the stuff we read because it’s not building on any existing knowledge. We’re often trying to learn complex things (that change rapidly) without understanding the basic things (which change slowly or not at all). Or, worse still, we’re uncritically letting other people do the thinking for us. This is the adult equivalent of regurgitating the definition of a bolded word in our high school textbook. Both of these lead to the illusion of knowledge and overconfidence. I’d argue that a better approach is to build a latticework of Mental Models. That is, acquire the core multi-disciplinary knowledge and use that as your foundation. This is the best investment because this stuff doesn’t change and if it does it changes really slowly. This becomes your foundation. This is what you build on. So when you read and connect things to the core knowledge, not only do you have a better idea of how things fit together but you strengthen those connections in your head from use. If you’re looking to acquire worldly wisdom, time is your best filter. It makes sense to focus on learning the core ideas over multiple disciplines. These remain constant. And when you have a solid foundation it’s easier to build upon because you connect what you’re learning to the (now very solid) foundation. — |
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