Mental Models
Conceptual frameworks for understanding reality and making better decisions
What Are Mental Models?
Mental models are simplified representations of how things work. They are cognitive tools we use to understand complex systems, make predictions, and guide decisions. The quality of our thinking depends on the quality of the models we apply.
βThe quality of our thinking is proportional to the models in our head and their usefulness in the situation at hand.β β Charlie Munger
Why Multiple Models?
A single model is like a single tool β it works for some jobs but not others. To avoid βman with a hammerβ syndrome (if your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail), you need a diverse toolkit of mental models.
Latticework of models: Multiple models from different disciplines, cross-referenced and reinforcing.
Categories
Systems Thinking
- Emergence β Whole greater than parts
- Feedback Loops β Circular causality
- Second-Order Thinking β Consequences of consequences
Decision Making
- Inversion β Solve backwards
- Opportunity Cost β Cost of alternatives
- Expected Value β Probability Γ payoff
- Local vs Global Optimization β Short-term vs long-term
Problem Solving
- First Principles Thinking β Break to fundamentals
- Map vs Territory β Model vs reality
- Occamβs Razor β Simplest explanation
- Hanlonβs Razor β Never attribute to malice
Strategic Thinking
- Asymmetric Risk β Limited downside, unlimited upside
- Leverage β Small effort, large effect
- Compounding β Exponential growth
- Margin of Safety β Room for error
Psychology & Human Behavior
- Incentives β What gets rewarded gets done
- Social Proof β Following the crowd
- Commitment and Consistency β Staying true to past actions
- Scarcity β Value from limited availability
How to Use Mental Models
- Learn: Build your toolkit one model at a time
- Recognize: Identify which model fits the situation
- Apply: Use the model to analyze and decide
- Combine: Use multiple models for complex problems
- Update: Refine models based on outcomes
The Convergence Protocol Approach
In the Nosos system, mental models are:
- Tools for clear thinking β Cutting through complexity
- Shared language β Common frameworks for discussion
- Explicit β Named and documented, not implicit
- Cross-referenced β Connected to biases, fallacies, cybernetics
Related
- Cognitive Biases β Common errors these models help avoid
- Logical Fallacies β Reasoning errors models help prevent
- Cybernetics β Systems thinking at the theoretical level
A mind with one model is a mind with one answer. A mind with many models finds the best answer. π§°