[HN Gopher] Powerful Study Tips from Richard Feynman
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Powerful Study Tips from Richard Feynman
Author : takiwatanga
Score : 23 points
Date : 2022-04-03 20:40 UTC (2 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (piggsboson.medium.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (piggsboson.medium.com)
| yarky wrote:
| "The only way to deep happiness is to do something you love to
| the best of your ability."
|
| That's sums it up pretty well.
| throwawayboise wrote:
| I think there are some (perhaps many) people who just don't
| have this level of passion in themselves.
|
| When I was younger, I liked working in software. It was fun,
| and interesting, but did I "love" it? Honestly I don't think
| so.
|
| Looking back on my time as a student, I can't think of any
| subject that I loved so much that that studying was something I
| wanted to do. It was always a chore, always something I did
| because it was a means to getting to a point in life where I
| didn't have to do it anymore.
|
| Now, at halfway through my 50s, I would not be able to answer
| the standard interview question "what are you passionate
| about?" Nothing comes to mind. Everything I do day-to-day is
| either stuff that I need to do to pay the bills and support my
| family, or is in some way procrastinating on stuff that isn't
| yet so urgent that I have to do it.
|
| I think people like Feynman are born with a burning passion for
| learning that most people just don't have.
| pddpro wrote:
| There's the famous Feynman method i.e. Study hard, Teach it to
| others, Identify the gaps in your own knowledge, and
| Simplify/Synthesize.
|
| But people often also forget that there is another method
| associated with Feynman aka The Feynman Algorithm (which was
| outlined by his colleague Murray Gell-Mann, a noble prize winning
| physicist himself). This method goes as follows:
|
| 1. Write down the problem. 2. Think real hard. 3. Write the
| solution.
|
| Not to discount or discredit anything (or anyone) here but we
| must understand that Feynman was no average person and that his
| advice on anything related to learning or problem-solving must be
| viewed through an optics that adequately adjusts for his
| intellect as well.
| marginalia_nu wrote:
| To be fair, that second algorithm works pretty well. I
| frequently solve problems by staring at them.
| WalterBright wrote:
| My variation on that method:
|
| 1. load my brain with all the context of the problem
|
| 2. go out for a run, which bounces it all around in my brain
| until things fall into place
|
| 3. write the solution when I get back
| BurningFrog wrote:
| A lazier step 2 that works for me is to sleep for a full
| night.
| qiskit wrote:
| > Teach it to others
|
| If there's no one around, try explaining it to yourself. An
| easy method to determine whether you superficially understood a
| topic or not. After reading some material, it's remarkable how
| little of it you've truly understood sometimes.
| paulpauper wrote:
| It also helps greatly to be as smart as him.
| whatshisface wrote:
| It's nice to get free stuff from nature but you can't go back
| and ask for more.
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