yes, I love this so much! I love that people are studying this rigorously. I feel like my role is just applying it in a way that is legible & can be practiced day to day in our lives. And in a way that we can get feedback from each other. It's like scaffolding for the layperson to these ideas, in a way that they cannot just "nod and smile" and say they get it. There is an empirical test: whether you are able to communicate & predict who you interact with on the internet
> If you’re trying to communicate with knowledge structures that your audience doesn’t have, or don’t match the level of developed relationship and timescale you’ve got with that person, you’re not going to have much luck
I loved this one! It was a simple misunderstanding, but it escalated quickly! Resolved quickly, too!
The awareness that people moving through their normal thought processes will inevitably step on each other's toes and that's okay and even a good source of learning...it's nice. 😊
I can't help but think about the deep connection between all these series of posts and Chuck Pezeshki's ideas, for whom "As we relate, so we think".
https://empathy.guru/fundamental-set-of-knowledge-structures/
yes, I love this so much! I love that people are studying this rigorously. I feel like my role is just applying it in a way that is legible & can be practiced day to day in our lives. And in a way that we can get feedback from each other. It's like scaffolding for the layperson to these ideas, in a way that they cannot just "nod and smile" and say they get it. There is an empirical test: whether you are able to communicate & predict who you interact with on the internet
> If you’re trying to communicate with knowledge structures that your audience doesn’t have, or don’t match the level of developed relationship and timescale you’ve got with that person, you’re not going to have much luck
I loved this one! It was a simple misunderstanding, but it escalated quickly! Resolved quickly, too!
The awareness that people moving through their normal thought processes will inevitably step on each other's toes and that's okay and even a good source of learning...it's nice. 😊
Inspiring.