ZenRaiden
One atom of me
Besides nootropics, is there any other way?
Same.Take it from me I do none of these things and I'm a total dumbass
I can't watch the video right now, but this is my advice:
Take it from me I do none of these things and I'm a total dumbass
- Good sleep, at least 8hrs
- Wake up without being awoken by something
- 1hr a day cardio
- Stay hydrated, avoid diuretics like coffee
- No drugs, especially no brain affecting drugs
- No alcohol
- Eat fruit, fish, nuts and meat, avoid processed sugars and keep carbs (rice, wheat, tubers, etc) to a minimum, especially pasta and bread
- Learn something new every day, studying for various certifications is a fantastic use of your time
Not a bad startRead statistics. It will turn you from a child to man in a day
Not a bad startRead statistics. It will turn you from a child to man in a day
You can use libgen or zlib to get primers for statistics. No shame in that. Learning some bayesian statistics will make you feel like a god when you start realizing just how STUPID everybody is and you are making decisions despite knowing the probabilities.I just read the article on it in Wikipedia
There is a lot that can be done with this.cognitive biases
When you have a multitool, everything looks like a screwburnedout learned bayes theorem and immediately started applying to personal dramas. Class
Yes, it would appear that we are poorly wired for pure rational thought. Emotion and autonomic behavior accounts for the vast majority of the why behind how we act. Reason is a vessel for how to attain that which the emotion drives toward. Even with reason, most of the individuals who lean more towards MBTI thinking over feeling tend to be bogged down with cognitive biases and logical fallacies. Undoing these last 2 things would probably aid in increasing intelligence if one defines intelligence to be "prefect reasoning abilities." Even with that definition, its tough. There are situations where heuristics work just as well as careful thought, and sometimes even better (which is why this was likely selected for). If you spend hours pondering the perfect solution where someone else came up with a less than perfect solution in a fraction of the time, who can be said to be more intelligent?There is a lot that can be done with this.cognitive biases
But ultimately its like MBTI sometimes. You learn whole lot of categories, but you never know how to apply them usefully to everyday life. Not that its not possible, but as you say psychology, does pay attention to cognitive biases.
I would argue tho that many cognitive biases are actually not cognitive so much as emotional to begin with.
Which is something I come to learn lately a whole lot.
I agree that if one wants to sharpen their reasoning skills, then they need to address cognitive biases and logical fallacies. However, sometimes heuristics "just works," in a fraction of the time.burnedout learned bayes theorem and immediately started applying to personal dramas. Classic
btw there's a whole field in psychology devoted to the shortcomings of the human mind in the domain of probabilistic reasoning; cognitive biases. Bayes theorem shows up in things like base-rate fallacy, but there's many other effects. Come to think of it, knowing cognitive biases is perhaps a good addition to the become-smarter list
They do tend to work for most parts until we anchor ourselves to false/salient memories and then start making judgements. Heuristics usually work with good inputs but fuck up instantly when you feed garbage to it. Without heuristics, we would have never had any progress in chess engines where heuristics tend to work so much more efficiently with good dataHowever, sometimes heuristics "just works," in a fraction of the time.
Indeed. Take the hypothetical scenario of a logician inserted into a warzone. (ignore for a sec how they would have got there in the first place), Would quick reflexes be able to serve them more than careful pondering of outcomes?They do tend to work for most parts until we anchor ourselves to false/salient memories and then start making judgements. Heuristics usually work with good inputs but fuck up instantly when you feed garbage to it. Without heuristics, we would have never had any progress in chess engines where heuristics tend to work so much more efficiently with good dataHowever, sometimes heuristics "just works," in a fraction of the time.
Fascinating, long have suspected the possibility, but did not know there are scientist who would claim this.Thus, the entire universe is conscious because consciousness follows directly from quantum mechanics and relativity. Man is “more conscious” than stone only because the neurons of the brain are a more convenient environment for quantum transition than the crystalline structure of stone or wood fibers, but man is definitely not the only, and certainly not the first thinking being.
Just by thinking something, we turn on (not “we”, it turns itself on) a quantum transition that connects us to any point in the Universe and to any complex mind that exists anywhere.