Importance of "digging" and "building up" knowledge
People who understand piling up from the basic concepts can answer in depth when asked about Abstract Concepts, "What does that mean?" they are able to answer in depth when asked "What does that mean? In contrast, [People who memorize the whole thing can't dig in. Knowledge must be connected to the "[root (of a tooth, hair, etc.)" of experience to be applicable. This is why knowledge that is "rootless" will eventually die out.
If you ask someone about an abstract concept X, "What exactly is that X?" some people will get a concrete example and others will get another abstract concept Y. But be aware that this can be a circular reference. Is this hypothesis really correct?
Understanding concepts is important, but too much abstraction makes them difficult to understand. Learning from small examples can prevent this problem. [How can the ability to abstract be taught?
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After writing this entry, you may use a vector search to find related articles and gain an even deeper understanding. Digging deeper and building on our knowledge is an important part of our growth and richer lives.
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People who understand piling up from the basic concepts can dig into Abstract Concepts when asked, "What does that mean?" can answer in depth when asked "What does it mean? It is not applicable knowledge unless it is connected to the "[root (of a tooth, hair, etc.)" of experience.
interpretation for abstract concepts tends to be discordant and sterile After writing up to this point, use vector search to bring up related articles. "For a given abstract concept X, what exactly is that X?" and if you ask, "What is that X concretely?", the person who gets a concrete example understands X, the person who gets another abstract concept Y is suspicious, and when you ask the same question further about Y... and repeat, the person who gets X without leading to a concrete example and becomes a circular reference doesn't understand X.
I'm not sure if the hypothesis that > this is really true, even though it seems to be correct at first glance.
... While it is important to talk about concepts, if you suddenly get into this, it becomes too abstract to know what you are talking about or why the abstraction is useful. So to prevent this, it is helpful to have experienced a small example in the first step. ---
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