Fair point. Didn’t think it through that much when I first drafted it. Still, multiplication has its time and place—at least for a portion of them.
You can categorize an “idea”, broadly speaking, into one of the two: a one-off change in state (e.g. any project), or a repeated execution of a particular behavior (e.g. building a new habit).
For a project, addition may be more suitable. Could you say the same about habits, though?
Why do you multiply time-to-understand by time-to-implement rather than add them?
Fair point. Didn’t think it through that much when I first drafted it. Still, multiplication has its time and place—at least for a portion of them.
You can categorize an “idea”, broadly speaking, into one of the two: a one-off change in state (e.g. any project), or a repeated execution of a particular behavior (e.g. building a new habit).
For a project, addition may be more suitable. Could you say the same about habits, though?