Systematic thinking went out of fashion as a badge of membership in the cognitive elite, back in the 1980s, partly because it’s rigid and brittle.
My question, I suppose, is "what about these dis-integral ideas makes them fashionable and how can we use it for actually good ideas?"
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Excellent question! Studying intellectual history, to get a sense of why ideas catch on, should help (although it’s not sufficient by itself)
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Pomo replaced systematic cognition as the badge of high academic achievement, because—done well—it’s more difficult, and it evades the foundational crisis in rationality.
Disastrously, though, it’s useless for problem-solving; its only value is personal advertisement.
Let’s make fluid, meta-systematic thinking the new fashionable IQ signaling device! It's even more difficult than pomo, AND it accurately addresses practical problems!