On the subject of writing again: I've always tended to approach new topics from an oblique angle. New things are best learned from afar.
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Often it's far more important to learn the fundamentals of a variety of other topics, so you understand what does and doesn't make sense.
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Take economists, for example:
It's easy to see how they get things so reliably wrong - they lack perspective, both internal and external.
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When you have this perspective, it's easy to see that many key premises of major fields are logically inconsistent or flat out wrong.
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Conversely, if you lack this perspective, you risk getting caught up in the reigning orthodoxy.
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Modern psychologists (outside of retrograde countries like the US) leer at behaviourism and psychoanalysis, but their own orthodoxies suck.
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The same applies for almost every field you can think of, scientific or not.
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So for example I learned most of what I know about meditation from religion, magic and mysticism. Or rather from the points where they clash
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I'm starting to see that I'm developing new fields like this, but now the hard part is to actually immerse myself better.
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You can't -just- grasp a topic from the outside. To understand it well, in a way that works, you need both direct experience and perspective
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So in all probability I need to read at least 20 or so books before I have more long form writing to do outside of a few narrow fields.
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