In my case, if you’re curious, I think the reason I’m the way I am comes down to efficient memory. To remember something reliably I have to be able to mentally connect it to something I already know, and ultimately to something inherently simple.
Interesting. That sounds like my habit of making sure everything I learn plugs into my model for everything else, and how I’m bothered if it doesn’t (literature and history class, I’m looking in your general direction here). Likewise, how I don’t regard myself as understanding a subject until my model is working and plugged in (level 2 in my article).
This is why I’ve usually found it easy to explain “difficult” topics to people, at least in person: per my comment here, I just find the inferentially-nearest thing we both understand, and build out stepwise from there. And, in turn, why I’m bothered by those who can’t likewise explain—after all, what insights are they missing by having such a comparmentalized (level 1) understanding of the topic?
Interesting. That sounds like my habit of making sure everything I learn plugs into my model for everything else, and how I’m bothered if it doesn’t (literature and history class, I’m looking in your general direction here). Likewise, how I don’t regard myself as understanding a subject until my model is working and plugged in (level 2 in my article).
This is why I’ve usually found it easy to explain “difficult” topics to people, at least in person: per my comment here, I just find the inferentially-nearest thing we both understand, and build out stepwise from there. And, in turn, why I’m bothered by those who can’t likewise explain—after all, what insights are they missing by having such a comparmentalized (level 1) understanding of the topic?