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Comrade Angles @Angle

Hmm. Now heres an in6teresting idea. In the same way that there ar simple machines for translating mechanical work between different forms and gaining mechanical advantage - Screw, pully, lever, inclined plane, etc - are there ways of translating mental effort between forms and gaining mental advantage? :/

@Angle I could use something that translates anxiety into euphoria

@Angle @gaditb different philosophical/disciplinary approaches, maybe

@gaditb @nev I'm thinking even more basic than that. I know in programming there are various ways of trading processor time for disk space for ram for whatever else. I mean things like that. Like, "this technique makes math take twice as long but be half as difficult, similar to how a pulley affects ones ability to lift stuff". Or more complicated tradeoffs, for other tasks.

@Angle @gaditb hmmm

(I am skeptical of the assumption that the brain is like a computer but it's an interesting analogy)

@gaditb @nev Well yeah, the brain is obviously a lot different from a computer, but physical bodies are even more different, and yet the analogy still holds true. There are all sorts or ways to trade one thing for another. Time for difficulty, processing power for disk space, distance of rope pulled versus distance of load lifted, etc, etc. Really, this is a nearly universal principle - things can be exchanged for other things, often on terms that are subjectively favorable. Why shouldn't it apply to Human minds? It's just a question of how, and how useful those tradeoffs might be.

@nev @gaditb I guess really, my question is so banal it's a little silly. Examples of said "Simple mental machines" include writing lists instead of trying to remember everything on the spot, writing out your math a bit at a time instead of trying to do it all in your head, etc. Really, these are both variants of "make a task easier by breaking it into smaller tasks and writing them out, thereby trading time and a whole lot of simple tasks versus a single complicated gask."

Though, banal or not, I kinda want to write out an article on said "Simple mental machines". Just to see where it takes me. :/

@Angle @nev @gaditb a shitty way to look at this is "lifehacks"

@Angle @gaditb @nev This might be an example of a trade off: producing sentences is difficult and time consuming ('articulatory bottleneck'). Prefer a system which fits more content into a sentence at the cost of inexplicitness and possible misunderstanding. Weight the risk differently when chatting to a friend and writing a law.

@Angle @gaditb @nev isn't that 'methodologies'? Working with powers of numbers is just multiplication done in a way that makes it less intuitive but faster.

@Angle 'learning how to use a calculator' involves effort spent on learning but then means you don't have to use brainpower on awkward or trivial calculations and can focus it on your actual problem instead. What's more mental-advantage than that?

Human minds already use many tricks to speed up processing and provide us with a seamless experience at a fraction of the cerebral activity necessary to compute a stream of consciousness from scratch. For example, memories are pieced back together from a few bits of actual stored knowledge and plenty of shared assumptions. Or fallacies that are thought shortcuts, with varying efficiencies.