Some of the notes in this deck are “title first”, i.e. they just name a concept and invite you to generate an ad-hoc explanation in your head. It’s a nonstandard use of SRS, and can take an immense amount of effort per card, but is also immensely useful practice for just being able to explain things. You can always move those to a separate deck called “The Tryhard Deck” or “Practice for Explaining”.
As for the rest, they’re classic well-formatted SRS—what’s not to like? You get a wall of text with enough material to identify the concept being clozed, and all you’re asked is to identify it (like “availability heuristic”). You still should read the sequences first, but I hope that’s a given.
Surprisingly useful, after cleanup (20% of the notes should be deleted). The link here is broken, but Pablo hosts an archive at https://www.stafforini.com/blog/anki-decks-by-lesswrong-users/.
Some of the notes in this deck are “title first”, i.e. they just name a concept and invite you to generate an ad-hoc explanation in your head. It’s a nonstandard use of SRS, and can take an immense amount of effort per card, but is also immensely useful practice for just being able to explain things. You can always move those to a separate deck called “The Tryhard Deck” or “Practice for Explaining”.
As for the rest, they’re classic well-formatted SRS—what’s not to like? You get a wall of text with enough material to identify the concept being clozed, and all you’re asked is to identify it (like “availability heuristic”). You still should read the sequences first, but I hope that’s a given.