Excellent post! I’ve noticed in my own life that I lot of the progress I make (in rationality or otherwise) comes when I get in the habit of asking better questions when something goes wrong. Your debugging chart offers a great diving board to do just that. I like the flexibility it offers as well. It would be easy enough to start with a blank OODA chart, and add one’s own tools as they learn them, since the placement on the chart is more a pragmatic memory tagging aid, rather than a deep epistemic claim.
Excellent post! I’ve noticed in my own life that I lot of the progress I make (in rationality or otherwise) comes when I get in the habit of asking better questions when something goes wrong. Your debugging chart offers a great diving board to do just that. I like the flexibility it offers as well. It would be easy enough to start with a blank OODA chart, and add one’s own tools as they learn them, since the placement on the chart is more a pragmatic memory tagging aid, rather than a deep epistemic claim.