The Art of Refactored Perception
When I made up the tagline, experiments in refactored perception, back in 2007, I had no idea how deeply that line would come to define the essence of ribbonfarm. So in this first post in my planned month-long retrospective on five years in the game, I decided to look back on the evolution and gradual deepening of the idea of refactoring perceptions.
(2017 update: you can now buy this collection as a Kindle ebook)
I've never attempted an overt characterization of what the phrase means, but over the years, I've explored it fairly systematically. This sequence of posts should help you appreciate what I mean by the phrase. I've arranged the sequence as a set of fairly natural stages. There is some commentary at the end. Here you go:
An anchor post for general orientation: A Big Little Idea Called Legibility
Perceiving
I've never attempted an overt characterization of what the phrase means, but over the years, I've explored it fairly systematically. This sequence of posts should help you appreciate what I mean by the phrase. I've arranged the sequence as a set of fairly natural stages. There is some commentary at the end. Here you go:
An anchor post for general orientation: A Big Little Idea Called Legibility
Perceiving
Preparing to Think
Thinking
- How to Think Like Hercule Poirot
- Boundary Condition Thinking
- Learning from One Data Point
- Lawyer Mind, Judge Mind
Writing
- Just Add Water
- The Rhetoric of the Hyperlink
- Seeking Density in the Gonzo Theater
- Rediscovering Literacy
1 Comment
WRT OODA for Thinking-by-Writing is an eloquent characterization.
I think Paul Graham (and others obv) have come to similar conclusions:
"I think it's far more important to write well than most people realize. Writing doesn't just communicate ideas; it generates them. If you're bad at writing and don't like to do it, you'll miss out on most of the ideas writing would have generated."
http://paulgraham.com/writing44.html