andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2022-02-06 12:00 pm
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Interesting Links for 06-02-2022
- 'Clients say it feels like we've always known each other': the mental health experts who believe their autism has turbocharged their work
- (tags:mentalhealth autism counselling )
- Black civil servant handed six-figure payout amid systematic racism in the heart of British government
- (tags:racism government uk )
- The case for and against analogies
- (tags:communication )
- NI Protocol: How Britain is causing chaos to avoid dealing with the issues
- (tags:UK NorthernIreland Europe Ireland borders trade regulation )
- Cerebrospinal fluid washing in and out of the brain during sleep
- (tags:sleep brains )
- Mapping the celebrity NFT complex
- (tags:celebrity blockchain )
- Worldle - Can you guess the country? (guesses give you a direction and a distance you were wrong by)
- (tags:countries game )
- Girl who followed party rules asks Boris Johnson for apology
- (tags:BorisJohnson party Pandemic )
- 15 EU states subsidise fossil-fuels more than renewables
- (tags:Europe subsidies globalwarming OhForFucksSake )
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(no subject)
The case for and against analogies
Sometimes it might help to have an explicit list of comparison, like "here's 10 properties of electricity, here's ones shared by water, here's ones that aren't", so you can grok how far the analogy goes, and test out your intuition against a known comparison. Although that makes more sense in an article than a casual conversation. But without it, if you're explaining something complicated, it's easy to remember a few details but lose track completely of what actually matches up and what doesn't.
Of course, another use is incidental but valuable: a colorful analogy can help you remember a particular point, even if it doesn't help you understand it :)
Worldle.
[Edit: Just realized it's daily, and everyone gets the same country. Answer redacted.
But yeah, about the last country you'd expect people to recognize on sight.]
Re: Worldle.
Re: Worldle.
Re: Worldle.
no subject