Peter Hollins - Mental Models

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๐Ÿ“– https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/45027848

MMs

  1. Address "Important"; Ignore "Urgent" to separate priorities from impostors
  2. Visualize All the Dominoes to make decisions as informed as possible
  3. Make Reversible Decisions to remove indecisions and have a bias to action
  4. Seek "Satisfiction" to achieve your priorities and ignore what doesn't matter
  5. Stay within 40% - 70% to balance information with action
  6. Minimize Regret by consulting the future you on decisions
  7. Ignore "Black Swans" to understand how outliers shouldn't change your thinking
  8. Look for Equilibrium Points to find real patterns in data and not be fooled
  9. Wait for the Regression to the Mean to find real patterns in data and not be fooled
  10. What Would Bayes Do to calculate probabilities and predict the future based on real events
  11. Do It Like Darwin to seek real, honest truth in a situation
  12. Think With System 2 to think analytically instead of emotionally
  13. Peer Review Your Perspectives to understand the consensus view and why you might differ
  14. Find Your Own Flaws to scrutinize yourself before others can
  15. Separate Correlation From Causation to understand what truly needs to be addressed to solve a problem

Decision Making For Speed And Context

To the man with only a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.

A mental model is a blueprint to emphasize important aspects of whatever you're facing, and it defines context, background and direction.

Without them, you are only able to see the haphazard, individual elements with no connection to each other.

A chef is someone who has the mental models of flavor profiles, what basic ingredients are needed for a stock or a sauce, typical techniques for different meats, and the conventional beverage and food pairings.

You can think of mental models as life heuristics or guidelines to evaluate and comprehend.

Mental models aren't perfect representations of the world around us, they serve to separate the signal from the noise for a specific perspective.

Too few mental models limit your capability to comprehend.

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MM #4: Seek "Satisfiction" to achieve your priorities and ignore what doesn't matter

Recognize wants masquerading as needs.

Avoid maximizing when it doesn't matter and with diminishing returns.

Perfect choice doesn't exist.

One implementation of this is to start with a limited scope and particular goal, instead of the open sea of possibilities. Narrow your scope based on predetermined requirements. For example, decide a few properties of the item you're looking for and then evaluate and compare items within those bounds. You'll save a lot of time.

Another option is to start with a default and a time limit, and fallback to default if time runs out. The trick here is that the default was likely what you would've picked anyways, no matter if you went through the notions of elaborate debating.

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