Another useful skill you can practice is *actually understanding people’s models*. Like, find something someone else believes, guess what their model, is then ask them “so your model is this?”, then repeat until they agree that you understand their model. This sort of active listening around models is definitely a prerequisite doublecrux skill and can be practiced without needing someone else to agree to doublecrux with you.
Nod. I haven’t actually been to CFAR recently, not sure how they go about it there. But I think for local meetups doing practice breaking it down into subskills seems pretty useful and I agree with active listening being another key one.
Another useful skill you can practice is *actually understanding people’s models*. Like, find something someone else believes, guess what their model, is then ask them “so your model is this?”, then repeat until they agree that you understand their model. This sort of active listening around models is definitely a prerequisite doublecrux skill and can be practiced without needing someone else to agree to doublecrux with you.
Nod. I haven’t actually been to CFAR recently, not sure how they go about it there. But I think for local meetups doing practice breaking it down into subskills seems pretty useful and I agree with active listening being another key one.