Books
Peter Hollins

Mental Models

  • DASHAhas quoted2 years ago
    “To the man with only a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.”
  • Blagoje Mirosavljevichas quoted3 years ago
    The mistake is thinking of “important” and “urgent” as synonymous and not realizing the huge gulf of difference between the two terms and how you should prioritize them. The ability to distinguish the two is a key step in lowering your anxiety, stopping procrastination, and making sure that you are acting in an optimized way.
  • Teishas quoted4 years ago
    Visualize all the dominoes, otherwise known as second-order thinking.
    This is simply trying to project into the future and extrapolate a range of consequences that you can use to conduct a cost-benefit analysis for your decisions or solutions
  • Teishas quoted4 years ago
    Just because something appears to demand a quick response doesn’t mean you should give it, and just because something is slowly ticking in the background doesn’t mean you should ignore it
  • Teishas quoted4 years ago
    Urgent task: These simply demand immediacy and speed, and usually come from other people.
  • mariareadshas quoted5 years ago
    Hanlon’s Razor forces you to take your offended ego out of a situation and analyze it with everyone’s best intentions in mind.
  • mariareadshas quoted5 years ago
    Empathy is a mental model in itself.
  • mariareadshas quoted5 years ago
    Relying on humans is not a smart move because humans are, by and large, careless idiots—myself absolutely included.
  • mariareadshas quoted5 years ago
    Etorre’s Observation: The other line always moves faster
  • mariareadshas quoted5 years ago
    We’re a lazy species that doesn’t want to do anymore than what is necessary at the present moment.
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)