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How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong?

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How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong? Why “what if we’re wrong?” is a feature of thinking, not a bug Big-Picture Framing How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong? This question sits at the heart of epistemology—the study of how we know what we know—and it quietly shapes how we learn, lead, and make decisions. Instead of treating it as a purely abstract fear, you can use it as a practical lens: our beliefs are like maps, not the territory, and every map leaves things out. In this post, we’ll explore how knowledge can be wrong yet still useful, when it’s likely to be overturned, and how to live productively with uncertainty. Along the way, you’ll get a mental toolkit for questioning assumptions without falling into paralysis or cynicism. Why this question matters more than it seems On the surface,  “What if everything we know is wrong?”  sounds like late-night dorm room philosophy. But underneath, it’s a power question: It shapes ...

What's Upstream from AI?

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What's Upstream from AI? Big-Picture Framing – Before the Algorithms We usually start thinking about AI at the moment of output: the answer on the screen, the suggestion in the product, the summary in your inbox. But the real leverage point sits  before AI  ever runs—upstream in the human choices, data, and incentives that quietly shape what these systems can and can’t do. Think of AI as the last mile of a long pipeline. Upstream are decisions about which problems deserve automation, what “good” looks like, whose data we use, and what risks we’re willing to accept. This piece gives you a simple mental model for that “before AI” layer, so you can influence outcomes long before you’re stuck arguing with a model’s answer. What does “upstream from AI” actually mean? Most AI debates start too late. A model behaves strangely, people argue about prompts, and someone suggests another safety filter. By then, the important decisions have already been made. “Upstream from AI” is everythi...

What Makes a Leader Worth Following?

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What Makes a Leader Worth Following? How real leadership earns trust, not just titles Big Picture Framing A  leader worth following  is less about charisma and more about the quiet patterns of behavior people learn to trust. In practice, we don’t follow job titles; we follow the people who make us feel safer, stronger, and clearer about where we’re going. This question invites you to look beyond buzzwords and ask, “Who would I actually choose to walk behind when the path gets foggy?” As you explore, notice how character, competence, and genuine care combine into a kind of “gravity” that pulls people in. Understanding that gravity is the first step to building it. Beyond Job Titles: The Core of Followability Think about the last time you  chose  to follow someone (not because you had to). It probably wasn’t their title that convinced you. It was a feeling:  “I trust this person.” At the core, a leader worth following consistently delivers three things: Character ...

What topics create instant common ground?

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What topics create instant common ground? Common Ground How to skip small talk and spark real connection in seconds Big-picture framing Topics that create instant common ground act like conversational shortcuts: instead of circling in small talk, you land quickly on something both people recognize, care about, or have lived through. The trick isn’t memorizing clever lines; it’s knowing which themes feel safe, shared, and easy to talk about with almost anyone. In this piece, we’ll unpack  topics that create instant common ground , why they work psychologically, and how to use them naturally in real conversations at work and in life. You’ll leave with concrete examples, a mental checklist, and a way to practice until this feels intuitive—not awkward. What makes a topic “instant common ground”? Think of common ground like a Venn diagram between your world and someone else’s. Instant common ground topics sit in the overlap that’s likely to exist with  almost  anyone, even if ...