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@lukemacmullan5027
16 күн бұрын
1. Before you open your book, reflect on what you already know. Write it down, this helps you analyse your personal biases 2. Identify points that challenge or confirm your initial assumptions. Consider why and how they do this. This clarifies understanding and indentified blind spots. 3. Ask probing questions. Look for underlying assumptions, create potential counter arguments. 4. Test hypothesis. Develop hypothesis based on your reading. How do they hold up against evidence form multiple sources. 5. Engage in dialogue. Test ideas of find new perspectives. 6. Reflect (after reading and writing) * This can help to inform your further learning, areas of weakness, areas where you believe you are right but others may be wrong.
@whatisahandle221
14 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@JoBrew
5 күн бұрын
Thank you for summarising this.
@robertogerardi7040
18 күн бұрын
If you want to go straight to the Socratic's method: 6:25 You are welcome.
@pichuelanewman7135
18 күн бұрын
Not all heroes wear capes, I love these videos but man this man talks a lot 😂
@RahulSingh-il6sz
17 күн бұрын
@@pichuelanewman7135 Ad Revenue!
@JJ-hb9in
16 күн бұрын
Literally a life saver Six and a half minutes of life
@EcclesiaSS
7 күн бұрын
cheers 😂
@davidmiller4078
3 күн бұрын
Obriardo amigo
@Tintak_hatpin
15 күн бұрын
This method is good, but when I was a student, problem for me was there were too many topics to cover under each chapter of each subject within a very limited time, especially after high school. For example during my Engineering, we typically had around 4 months from the start of the semester to the exams. In that 4 months we had 6 subjects + 4 or 5 labs. Now each of these subjects and multiple chapters and each chapters had multiple sections or topics to cover, & then problems associated with those topics to solve. So you dont really have the luxury of time with you to deepdive in each topic like that.
@kagepoker
18 күн бұрын
The key word is EXAMINATION. In other words, we must scrutinize, analyze and critically evaluate everything. Such is the stance of a lover of wisdom--a philosopher. As Socrates said, the unexamined life is not worth living.
@TheDavidlloydjones
18 күн бұрын
An oddity: Socrates was a war hero -- for his behaviour in defeat. A sergeant in the Athenian Army, he held his men together when his battalion was falling apart and getting slaughtered around them by the Persians, and was remembered by dozens of his men as their immediate and genine saviour.
@dorianphilotheates3769
18 күн бұрын
@DavidLloyd...Socrates did distinguish himself for conspicuous valour in combat, but it wasn’t against the Persians (the Persian Wars took place a generation before him). Socrates fought in the Peloponnesian War (431- 401 BC) against the Spartans and their allies; he in fact served as a hoplite on three separate deployments during the Peloponnesian War, but the event you’re referring to occurred during the Potidaean Campaign, in Northern Greece, where Socrates rallied his unit when it was on the verge of being routed by the Spartan forces. Throughout that engagement Socrates kept his head and held the phalanx line together, saving the lives of several of his comrades including the young Alcibiades, who would go on to command the Athenian forces during the ill-fated Sicilian Expedition later in the War.
@kitburton
17 күн бұрын
Source please
@someguy782
17 күн бұрын
@@kitburton must be Xenophon, beyond that I don't know.
@dorianphilotheates3769
18 күн бұрын
I’ve got an uncle named Sokrates ( he’s my dad’s first cousin, and runs a souvlaki joint in Astoria N.Y. together with his brother Aristotle - no foolin’!). Like his ancient namesake, Uncle Sokrates likes to bug and “confuse people”, but they keep coming back for more (mainly because he makes a mean gyros 🌯).
@cristianguerra1617
Күн бұрын
"Gyros" you mean balkanic döner kebab? Also known as "hellenic shawarma"
@severpop8699
13 сағат бұрын
@@cristianguerra1617 thy are like.... tacos.
@douglasstrother6584
16 күн бұрын
When I was in Physics, I would organize "Problem Set Parties" with some classmates. We always had good discussions about homework & lecture notes, and they were a fun & productive way to socialize. Attending office hours (both the Professor's & TA's) with some good (or stupid) questions was a big help.
@crypticnomad
16 күн бұрын
I have solved some really hard problems by not being afraid to ask stupid questions. Sometimes the question people are afraid to ask because they don't want to sound stupid hides the path to a major breakthrough and sometimes it is just a stupid question.
@douglasstrother6584
15 күн бұрын
@@crypticnomad Agreed! Stupid questions can range from misunderstanding a sign convention to tapping into a really hard problem.
@alancoe1002
7 күн бұрын
I found it to be an absolute necessity.
@williamhutto3677
10 күн бұрын
The Socratic Method (0:00) Involves asking a series of questions to help students think critically about a topic. How to Use the Socratic Method (1:53) 1. Clarify the basics (2:19) Make sure you understand the key terms and concepts. 2. Ask probing questions (2:47) Questions that challenge or confirm your assumptions. Questions that help you understand the underlying principles. 3. Test hypotheses (2:58) Develop hypotheses or interpretations based on your reading. Test them against evidence from the text and other sources. 4. Engage in dialogue (3:05) . Discuss the topic with others to test your ideas and find new perspectives. 5. Reflect on your learning (3:16) What have you learned? What do you still need to explore? What new questions do you have? Benefits of the Socratic Method (5:12) Helps you think more critically about information. Improves your ability to learn and understand new concepts. Deepens your insights and helps you develop new perspectives.
@d7writes
2 сағат бұрын
I bought the book based on your recommendation a few days ago. I devoured it and regarded it as potentially the most consequential book I’ve read in a long time. The discussions I’ve had since I started reading it have been different from before. Sometimes, you read a book, and it begins changing you before you even finish it. Thank you for the recommendation.
@NoahNobody
7 күн бұрын
This is also a neat prompt for AI... Do the Socratic method on the strategy design pattern. Alright, let's break down the *Strategy Design Pattern* using the Socratic method. I'll guide you through a series of questions: 1. *What problem do you think the Strategy Design Pattern solves?* 2. *When you have a class with multiple algorithms or behaviors that can vary, how would you typically handle that without a pattern?* 3. *What are the downsides of using conditionals or switch statements to select different behaviors in the same class?* 4. *How might separating each algorithm or behavior into its own class help address those downsides?* 5. *If each behavior is encapsulated in a separate class, how can the main class decide which behavior to use?* 6. *What role do you think interfaces or abstract classes play in making these behaviors interchangeable?* 7. *What are the benefits of being able to swap out behaviors dynamically at runtime instead of hardcoding them?* 8. *If you wanted to introduce a new behavior or algorithm, how could the Strategy Design Pattern make that easier?* 9. *How would this approach improve the maintenance and flexibility of your code compared to embedding all the logic in a single class?* By the end of this questioning, you should be able to see that the Strategy Design Pattern helps in maintaining flexibility and reduces the need for hardcoding algorithms or behaviors in one class by using composition over inheritance. It allows you to swap behaviors at runtime easily without modifying the client code.
@hamishmaxa6509
3 күн бұрын
I finally understood my first year biology when as a postgrad student, and getting some part time work as a lab assistant for first year biology, I had to explain course material to students.
@rodrigopassarelli1
12 күн бұрын
Two ideas that will put you on a learning rabbit hole forever: - Zettelkasten - Bloom's Taxonomy of Learning Objectives
@kelton5020
10 күн бұрын
I already do this more or less when I'm serious about learning something, kind of came naturally.
@tanelisalokangas8649
2 күн бұрын
This video by far has the only ad I have ever enjoyed and might try. Also, thanks for the video!
Thanks bro, I always learn new things from you .Mostly about personal development 😊
@VaibhavShewale
15 күн бұрын
well the main thing i grasp is that we should always have three things when approaching or learning new things is the WWH approach and this is What, Why and How
@Hofer2304
17 күн бұрын
As a programmer you also want to learn what do your clients actually want? How do you learn the most from a tutorial? How can other developers learn what your code does?
@someguy782
17 күн бұрын
How can you spend all your time optimizing yourself to be better at optimizing?
@lucasferrer7005
16 күн бұрын
I love this channel so much.. started following around late 2016 and over the years just have gotten better and better
@ConAnEdujawa
18 күн бұрын
I hope you make a video about reading and showing us your approach 😊
@VarshaSingh-i2s
Күн бұрын
Unconsciously, I have been using this method for quite a while now.
@youtoo4971
17 күн бұрын
Hi Giles. Thank you for a very informative video. Can you please make a video on the first principles thinking method too?
@notebookaddict
15 күн бұрын
0:46 that face on the left is going to haunt me for the rest of eternity. AI-generated images are terrifying.
@TheGoldenWildcat
15 күн бұрын
I am angry that no one ever thought of teach kids to how to use this best learning method in schools.
@mintuchakraborty8881
17 күн бұрын
Good job , carry on your work to future 🎉🎉
@waveduality
13 күн бұрын
As always, an excellent video. You've created lots of videos about learning. So let me ask you: which method works best for you? Might be worth a video where you compare the methods and you explain which works the best for you and why, with the caveat to the viewer that YMMV.
@JakeRichardsong
17 күн бұрын
The used car scenario is a useful analogy.
@willreierson5736
13 күн бұрын
This is great advice. My question is how one can apply it effectively when oftentimes the expectation is to read four to six 50 page chapters of dense material each week. Actually learning things takes time that I never feel like I have.
@musonobari2560
18 күн бұрын
is there anyone else about to go insane from JavaScript's DOM manipulation & event handling here 🥵🥵 'cause I seriously need help!
@knw-seeker6836
17 күн бұрын
School system wasn’t made to teach people how to learn but behave like robots for the future job And it’s still based mostly on the same principles
@0ptikGhost
12 күн бұрын
The school system was created to keep you busy and outside the job market. A lack of critical thought is icing on the cake. My high school prided itself on critical thought but it never taught how to do it. Practice is important, even critical, but one must know what they practicing, how one fails, and what improvement requires. Success, whatever that means, is the least important bit.
@Amazology
3 күн бұрын
Does deepened insight assume that there is a core or kernel ? What about coherence ? Is there something of a particle vs continuum dynamic going on here ? What is the true utility of critical thinking ?
@rashedulkabir6227
17 күн бұрын
Previous thumbnail was good.
@tonimisetic
22 сағат бұрын
this method is called dialectic,for definition read plotinus on dialectic.. btw socrates was not real person but a metaphor of plato for divine mind thought....platonism is ascetic manual for divine contemplation and release from birth and death not just thinking about the things like western phd "philosophers" do
@user-ku7gg6sb8i
6 күн бұрын
Reading books va online tutorials which one is best
@YO-BIZZY
17 күн бұрын
Basically keep questioning scenarios based off of the content you are learning
@someguy782
17 күн бұрын
Oh, so many helpful little tips.
@SimGunther
16 күн бұрын
The most powerful one-word question of all: Why? You can get to the root of things in 5 whys and receive a better education than most classrooms will give you in a whole semester.
@0ptikGhost
12 күн бұрын
In most cases, why is too general a question to be effective. It can be a good starting point but you quickly want to narrow your scope. This is where other forms of questioning become critical.
@Linux4thePeople
18 күн бұрын
Love this channel!
@chronosferatu345
Күн бұрын
This sounds like an interesting subject, but I found the animation with the manic violin to be too distracting after the third instance to continue on.
One question I have. With the amount of content that one needs to deal with today in all subjects is it really possible to spend this amount of time on anything? Even specialization these days is getting correlated into multiple domains.
@0ptikGhost
12 күн бұрын
Learn to read less. Seriously. Read the table of contents. Read diagram and figure notes. Skim the text for important ideas, definitions, etc. Move quickly through the text generating questions along the way. Dive in for understanding allowing your questions to guide you. This turns reading from a linear and passive activity into a nonsequential and active activity. The transition is hard because it requires lots of practice but your gains will be great. Also, I cannot enphasize enough how important it is to do all this prior to covering the subject in lecture. By that time lecture should be review. It really is too bad we don't teach our children to read/learn properly at an early age because doing so on your own, without support, in university is incredibly difficult. Don't give up.
@Roots2shoots
2 күн бұрын
This guy knows photosynthesis!
@user-xz7tx6gi3y
18 күн бұрын
if you watch the video again you won't believe that you watched it once. for some strange reason it is as though it's a totally new video.
@stevena139
14 сағат бұрын
Wow, the section where you flash words to fast to read while saying something else when I'm expecting to hear the 6 methods was extra frustrating.
@mintuchakraborty8881
17 күн бұрын
From India
@SuccessMindset2180
8 күн бұрын
Socratic method is very effective in finding truth on spot
@BertWald-wp9pz
5 күн бұрын
Great talk.
@adioth1705
17 күн бұрын
Thank you! ❤👍
@---Oracle---
17 күн бұрын
Tip: You can always engage in discussion about it with an llm you don't need someone else
@0ptikGhost
12 күн бұрын
You can also spend your time discussing things with yourself. You don't need an llm.
@andyrahman5744
Күн бұрын
Allah's message to atheists. In the Koran Surah (52) at-tur verse 35-36 .It reads. 35. Or were they created without an origin or did they create (themselves)? 36. Or did they create the heavens and the earth? Actually they don't believe (what they say).
@PraveenKanand
18 күн бұрын
Sure 😊
@mariochill
15 күн бұрын
valuable information but somehow the video is quite dull
@LearningandTechnology
16 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@Mtmonaghan
Күн бұрын
He looked for justification to any claims made by folks, who claimed they knew something. So, for example, if someone claim an act just, he would demand to be told of the rational principles they were applying in making such a claim. Obviously they could not, not at least to his satisfaction. He was kind of on the spectrum and would if encountered quickly, pi** you off. Most of what we understand about our world is not based on rational principles, we know very well HOW but not WHAT. Even simple tasks, like how to use a phone, I can do without thinking about it. But if someone demanded I wrote down all the principles associated with such an involvement, I would find it so much more difficult. This because I don’t follow rational rules when I perform them, but I do them well all the while. He and a lot of philosophy since then, have over looked the fact that most of what we understand is not thematic rule following. We are Being-in-the-world, read Martin Heidegger.
@NottaChanceman
17 күн бұрын
What does the Socratic method have to say about the recent use of BCE as a date clarifier? And how would he describe the people who use it? We wonders, yes precious, we wonders ...
@zilph82
18 күн бұрын
Have you read about the madhyamaka philosohy or learning method from nagarjuna ? It has some similarities. Try asking chatgpt to give you a summary.
@cbbcbb6803
16 күн бұрын
If I had only known this in the 2nd grade.
@WTG194
16 күн бұрын
This is what philosophy is about
@emonymph6911
7 күн бұрын
GIles when are you gonna stop learning and applying your current knowledge to doing something brilliant for mankind and enrich yourself in the process? You are the most intelligent youtuber I have ever seen but you are addicted to learning new stuf instead of mastering and making. I say this not as an attack on you but a reflection for how I feel, I'm sick of lifelong learning you have to draw the line somewhere. Would be interesting to hear your thoughts on this. With that said thank you for sharing the socratic method, AI is a good tool for this - you can use it to bounce ideas around and see how they are connected.
@samijee
8 күн бұрын
so basically doing philosophy. Thanks.
@LoreMIpsum-vs6dx
3 күн бұрын
Relentless, confrontational questions? That's called being in a relationship. Yeah, who hasn't been tempted to smother their partner in their sleep? That's why we love them.
@Nonexistent520
18 күн бұрын
Does this learning method also improve memory?
@GurungyNoHamuster
17 күн бұрын
That's a complex question. The best tip I ever got is a quote: The art of memory is the art of attention. Because, you will know, there are things you never forget... you just have to make everything you want to remember the same as them.
@YO-BIZZY
17 күн бұрын
The more active you are with the information taking in, the more likely it will stick. Like reading something once vs rewriting it on paper and then speaking it after rewriting it
@martinwilliams9866
15 күн бұрын
It's quite difficult to un-understand something!
@tt4m
17 күн бұрын
❤❤Amazing
@smallbluemachine
5 күн бұрын
0:20 Anything’s possible under the current government to be honest.
@peterney2402
12 сағат бұрын
If you scrutinise, examine, analyse, evaluate seek and uphold truth and facts in Britain today you certainly stand a serious chance of being sent to jail. Not much has changed in the last three millenium. I am basing my comments on observations.
@muzkaii
18 күн бұрын
Critical thinking
@KellyB.-wi9nf
15 сағат бұрын
And now you've been so overloaded with questions about everything all the time again and again, and most people have shut down and go with how they feel. I the end, most people don't need intellectual stimulation, they need clarity.
@hans6422
4 күн бұрын
Background music is cancer
@noam65
17 күн бұрын
No, they sentenced him to death for corrupting the youth, not because he was a smart guy.
@whatisahandle221
14 күн бұрын
“Corrupting youth” by teaching them to think critically about the status quo, even their own parents & privledges.
@noam65
14 күн бұрын
@@whatisahandle221 as they were often at war with their neighbors and other nations, as well, that may have been aserious issue for them.
@matt92hun
9 күн бұрын
It's a matter of perspective. One man's critical thinking is another man's corruption.
@noam65
9 күн бұрын
@@whatisahandle221 I'm not analyzing what happened, just reporting the facts.
@gyanendrakumar2350
5 күн бұрын
He should born in India
@andyrahman5744
Күн бұрын
Why don't you find out about Islam. And you can compare the Quran and the Bible. In Islam, Jesus is a prophet, not a god. And God is one, not three........
@carmelbrain7399
17 күн бұрын
wow
@danh5637
17 күн бұрын
Nothing compared to the trivium.
@mariescoco
5 күн бұрын
Thank you but too much talking.
@ryanstewart6873
4 күн бұрын
SO CRATES!!! Bill and Ted ruined how to pronounce his name lol.
@grandarchon6969
Күн бұрын
you can get 520K subscribers by telling them to critically think while the read? What has this world come to...?
@Mtmonaghan
Күн бұрын
People are desperate for answers, if you believe you can provide some, then do so. The question is,where can I find meaning and thus passion ? Please.
@grandarchon6969
Күн бұрын
@@Mtmonaghan Your question is absurd on it's surface. Camus- "one must imagine Sisyphus happy". There is no meaning. Happiness, joy, and passion are only found in work. Producing goods and services for your fellow man. Not in what that good is, or represents, or how it literally benefits the consumer. But in the work itself. Experience the task and toil. Appreciate the task. Acknowledge the absurdity of the task, and do it anyway. You're welcome.
@TheVigilantEye77
16 күн бұрын
May I suggest a project… What is a woman
@WilliamHerdman-x5w
3 күн бұрын
Like much of the KZitem algorithm: One Word: Moron. You’re not talking about a way of learning, you’re talking about a type of philosophy. Philosophy is not a way of learning on its own, and learning is not a type of philosophy on its own. They are related though, but not to the point where they are mutually acceptable as the same (I wasted time replying, in that it won’t fix anything: why bother making KZitem videos to spread a common word of some truth to mix-up many false-hoods)?
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