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The Feynman Technique is a Mental Model named after Richard Feynman, a Nobel

Prize Winning Physicist. It is designed as a technique to help you learn pretty much
learn anything - so understand concepts you don't really get, remember stuff you have
already learnt, or study more efficiently.

The Feynman Technique was actually a big inspiration for this blog - I try and apply this
to a lot of the concepts and Mental Models that I write about.

The technique can be broken down into four easy steps, but first a quick video
from Scott Young that sums it up very simply.

Step 1

Write the name of the concept at the top of a blank piece of paper.

Step 2

Write down an explanation of the concept on the page. Use plain English. Pretend you
are teaching it to someone else (e.g a new student). This should highlight what you
understand, but more importantly pinpoint what you don't quite know.

Step 3

Review what you have pinpointed you don't know. Go back to the source material, re-
read, and re-learn it. Repeat Step 2.

Step 4

If you are using overly wordy or confusing language (or simply paraphrasing the source
material) try again so you filter the content. Simplify your language, and where possible
use simple analogy.

Conclusion

That's it. A simple and powerful technique to ensure you can rapidly learn and retain
new concepts and information. 

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