Antisuji comments on Useful maxims - Less Wrong

26 Post author: ciphergoth 11 July 2012 11:56AM

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Comment author: Jayson_Virissimo 13 July 2012 09:38:24AM 8 points [-]

Wise men store up knowledge, but the mouth of a fool invites ruin.

-Proverbs 10:14

My personal version would go something like this:

More Anki, less debating politics on Facebook.

Comment author: [deleted] 13 July 2012 10:34:44PM *  1 point [-]

Except for languages and stuff like that, I don't think the kind of learning you get from Anki and similar is that useful. I say I learn something when it becomes truly part of me -- which Anki cannot do. Merely memorizing stuff which I could look up on Google in a few seconds if I needed to doesn't sound like a terribly useful use of my time. (Einstein didn't see the use of learning the speed of sound in air when he could look it up, and he didn't have a cellphone with an Internet connection with him all the time.)

Comment author: Antisuji 17 July 2012 04:20:20AM 1 point [-]

This has not been my experience with Anki, or at least not exclusively. The optimal way to use SRS is to build a complex, redundant network of associations. In other words, to do what you'd be doing anyway, but ideally in less time and with less effort. Each repetition of a fact is an opportunity to strengthen not only the connection represented therein, but the adjacent connections in your network.

You're not just memorizing facts; you're explicitly training your internal models.

Comment author: Benquo 17 July 2012 04:24:29AM 1 point [-]

Do you have an example of where that's worked out well for you?