"Putting it all together" and "getting it together."
Jiro Kawakita sometimes describes "summarize" and "be collected" as different things.
It's not that humans I'll try my best to summarize., it's that [Data is compiled on its own.
When people who have experienced "come to one's own" hear this, they say, "Oh, that.
If you have no experience, you may be thinking, "It comes together on its own? How is that possible?" p.53
It is similar to explaining a bicycle in words to someone who has never ridden it Parable of the Bicycle, but they don't get it.
In Ideas, p. 53, he writes
While I was obsessed with the vague, big-broth term, "compiling materials," my research materials were "inconsistent," which is a very ironic result.
The rest of the section is abstract and difficult to communicate.
It "comes together" only when both methods of summary analysis and integration are exercised in their entirety in a relevant manner.
He uses the strong phrase "ambiguous and big talk."
In short, I'm pointing out that everyone thinks they know what "putting it all together" means, and that I think I can do it, but I'm not sure what exactly "putting it all together" means.
let the chaos speak for itself, p. 331, counterposes the KJ method with "Normal summary thoughts."
https://gyazo.com/01d61be24ae351deb2290f04d0c2082e
p.332〜334:
Mosaic World
An ecological world of seamless meaning
This is an interesting story, but I'll explain it another time.
roughly speaking
summary thought is beneficial because it reduces decision time, but we tend to use it even in situations where it is not available
Then the "well-organized parts" become a pieced together "Mosaic World".
Explore Net is "seamless" to connect the pieces together.
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