I haven’t read any of that yet, but it sounds interesting. I’m commenting on articles as I read them, going through the sequences as they are listed on the sequences page.
I think it makes a practical difference in actually understanding when you understand something. The practical advice given is to “contain” the “source” for each thought. The trouble is that I don’t see how to understand when such a thing occurs, so the practical advice doesn’t mean much to me. I don’t see how to apply the advice given, but if I could I most definitely would, because I wish to understand everything I know. In part, writing my post was an attempt to make clear to myself why I didn’t understand what was being said. I’m still kind of hoping I’m missing something important, because it would be awesome to have a better process for understanding what I understand.
Hmm, perhaps I was reading too much into it, then. I already do that part, largely because I hate memorization and can fairly easily retain facts when they are within a conceptual framework.
It’s intuitive that better understanding some concept or idea leads to better updating as well as better ability to see alternative routes involving the idea, but it seemed like there was something more being implied; it seemed like there he was making a special point of some plateau or milestone for “containment” of an idea, and I didn’t understand what that meant. But, as I said, I was probably reading too much into it. Thanks, this was a pleasant discussion :)