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taryneast comments on Low Hanging fruit for buying a better life - Less Wrong Discussion

21 Post author: taryneast 06 January 2015 10:11AM

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Comment author: taryneast 11 January 2015 01:09:34AM 1 point [-]

How much incidental (non-helpful) knowledge must you learn in order to know what are the things that are worthwhile and what are not?

Comment author: pinyaka 11 January 2015 03:27:39PM 1 point [-]

I bought my repair book speculatively. Subsequently, as repairs became necessary I googled to get a feel for what the normal costs for that repair were and the cost for the parts. Then I looked at my book to see how much sense the instructions made to me and decided from there whether I thought I could get the job done for less time than the price difference would be worth, roughly speaking. I didn't learn anything new to make the estimate and my only previous automotive repair experience was having changed my oil once or twice with my Dad as a teen. I did not think of myself as mechanically inclined at all, but had been working with a group of mechanical engineers for a few years which gave me the confidence that if I broke something while learning, I could buy a replacement part or, worst case, pay an expert to fix my error.