I’d be up for a dialogue mostly in the sense of the first bullet about “making sense of technical debates as a non-expert”. As far as it’s “my domain” it’s in the context of making strategic decisions in R&D, but for example I’d also consider things like understanding claims about LK-99 to fall in the domain.
I think on and off about how one might practice (here’s one example) and always come away ambivalent. Case studies and retrospectives are valuable, but lately, I tend to lean more pragmatic—once you have a basically reasonable approach, it’s often best to come to a question with a specific decision in mind that you want to inform, rather than try to become generically stronger through practice. (Not just because transfer is hard, but also for example because the best you can do often isn’t that good, anyway—an obstacle for both pragmatic returns and for feedback loops.) And then I tend to think that the real problem is social—the most important information is often tacit or embedded in a community’s network (as in these examples)—and while that’s also something you can learn to navigate, it makes systematic deliberate practice difficult.
I’d be up for a dialogue mostly in the sense of the first bullet about “making sense of technical debates as a non-expert”. As far as it’s “my domain” it’s in the context of making strategic decisions in R&D, but for example I’d also consider things like understanding claims about LK-99 to fall in the domain.
I think on and off about how one might practice (here’s one example) and always come away ambivalent. Case studies and retrospectives are valuable, but lately, I tend to lean more pragmatic—once you have a basically reasonable approach, it’s often best to come to a question with a specific decision in mind that you want to inform, rather than try to become generically stronger through practice. (Not just because transfer is hard, but also for example because the best you can do often isn’t that good, anyway—an obstacle for both pragmatic returns and for feedback loops.) And then I tend to think that the real problem is social—the most important information is often tacit or embedded in a community’s network (as in these examples)—and while that’s also something you can learn to navigate, it makes systematic deliberate practice difficult.
Yeah I am interested in chatting about this.
(I’ll try to followup this weekend, if I fail feel free to ping me again)