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#mental-models — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #mental-models, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. DATE: July 1, 2026 at 03:24AM
    SOURCE: SCIENCE DAILY MIND-BRAIN FEED

    TITLE: Modern neuroscience is rediscovering an idea Freud had 130 years ago

    URL: sciencedaily.com/releases/2026

    What if Sigmund Freud was onto something that modern neuroscience is only now beginning to explain? A new paper argues that today's leading theory of the brain—as a prediction machine constantly anticipating the world—closely mirrors ideas psychoanalysis has explored for more than a century.

    URL: sciencedaily.com/releases/2026

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    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    Unofficial Psychology Today Xitter to toot feed at Psych Today Unofficial Bot @PTUnofficialBot

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    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #depression #psychotherapist #Freud #modernneuroscience #predictionmachine #psychoanalysis #neuroscience #cognitivepsychology #braintheory #predictionerror #mentalmodels #neurosciencehistory

  2. DATE: July 1, 2026 at 03:24AM
    SOURCE: SCIENCE DAILY MIND-BRAIN FEED

    TITLE: Modern neuroscience is rediscovering an idea Freud had 130 years ago

    URL: sciencedaily.com/releases/2026

    What if Sigmund Freud was onto something that modern neuroscience is only now beginning to explain? A new paper argues that today's leading theory of the brain—as a prediction machine constantly anticipating the world—closely mirrors ideas psychoanalysis has explored for more than a century.

    URL: sciencedaily.com/releases/2026

    -------------------------------------------------

    Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

    Unofficial Psychology Today Xitter to toot feed at Psych Today Unofficial Bot @PTUnofficialBot

    -------------------------------------------------

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #depression #psychotherapist #Freud #modernneuroscience #predictionmachine #psychoanalysis #neuroscience #cognitivepsychology #braintheory #predictionerror #mentalmodels #neurosciencehistory

  3. This is one of those ideas that constantly recurs in my mind throughout my day, one of those perspective-affecting mental models that helps me navigate the world, and hopefully will do the same for you. nonzerosum.games/goo... #mentalmodels

    GOODHART'S LAW

  4. This is one of those ideas that constantly recurs in my mind throughout my day, one of those perspective-affecting mental models that helps me navigate the world, and hopefully will do the same for you. nonzerosum.games/goo... #mentalmodels

    GOODHART'S LAW

  5. One of the most important is a task and project management system I built called TaskGrid.

    Read more 👉 lttr.ai/AsMV8

    #mentalmodels #howto #productivity

  6. When Missing Files Break Mental Models digs into what happens when your code layout lies to you. If paths don’t match expectations, how far does the damage go?

    👉 zalt.me/blog/2026/06/missing-f

    #softwareengineering #devexperience #codebase #mentalmodels

  7. Let's unpack this, not as a PhD thesis, but like we're two old friends talking about the markets over coffee (and maybe some bourbon 🍸 if it's been that kind of quarter).

    Read more 👉 lttr.ai/AsAat

    #mentalmodels #rationalthinking

  8. #Momentum #MentalModels
    Vencer el inicio es el 80% de la ecuación. Una vez que el sistema se mueve, la energía requerida para mantenerlo es drásticamente menor. Ideas complejas, trazos simples. 🧠

  9. Ah, the classic "I tried to understand algebraic effects, failed miserably, and then realized they're not so scary after all" tale 🤓. Spoiler alert: it ends with a React team inside joke about mental models that only they find funny. Who knew academic PDFs could be such a snooze fest? 💤
    overreacted.io/algebraic-effec #algebraicEffects #ReactTeam #mentalModels #programmingHumor #academicPapers #HackerNews #ngated

  10. Ah, the classic "I tried to understand algebraic effects, failed miserably, and then realized they're not so scary after all" tale 🤓. Spoiler alert: it ends with a React team inside joke about mental models that only they find funny. Who knew academic PDFs could be such a snooze fest? 💤
    overreacted.io/algebraic-effec #algebraicEffects #ReactTeam #mentalModels #programmingHumor #academicPapers #HackerNews #ngated

  11. Super Thinking: The Big Book of Mental Models "You can't really know anything if you just remember isolated facts" Sale: $31 to $2.99 by Gabriel Weinberg and Lauren McCann Rating: 4.5/5 (1223 Reviews) #business #management #leadership #decisionmaking #problemsolving #mentalmodels #booksky #books

    Super Thinking: The Big Book o...

  12. Super Thinking: The Big Book of Mental Models "You can't really know anything if you just remember isolated facts" Sale: $31 to $2.99 by Gabriel Weinberg and Lauren McCann Rating: 4.5/5 (1223 Reviews) #business #management #leadership #decisionmaking #problemsolving #mentalmodels #booksky #books

    Super Thinking: The Big Book o...

  13. When it comes to tasks, the question isn’t “How do I get more done?” but “What distracts me?” Turns out, for me, it’s that one open browser tab I swear I’ll close later.

    Read more 👉 lttr.ai/Arflf

    #mentalmodels #lifehacks #CharlieMunger

  14. These systems analyze probability, impact, and occasionally novelty to produce actionable insights rather than just dashboards.

    Read the full article: The Pyramid I Operate From
    lttr.ai/ApyWC

    #mentalmodels #howto #productivity

  15. When the items on the grid are complete, my brain gets a clear signal that it's time to stop working and return to full optionality—the freedom to explore, learn, or simply disengage.

    Read more 👉 lttr.ai/ApyFQ

    #mentalmodels #howto #productivity

  16. Beyond physical tools, we build conceptual models to predict the environment. We constantly test these internal models and modify them based on our results to better understand the world around us. #MentalModels #LearningTheory

  17. Beyond physical tools, we build conceptual models to predict the environment. We constantly test these internal models and modify them based on our results to better understand the world around us. #MentalModels #LearningTheory

  18. “For what man in the natural state or course of thinking did ever conceive it in his power to reduce the notions of all mankind exactly to the same length, and breadth, and height of his own? Yet this is the first humble and civil design of all innovators in the empire of reason.”*…

    A “theory of everything” (a Grand Unified Theory on steriods)– a (still hypothetical) coherent theoretical framework of physics containing and explaining all physical principles– is the holy grail of physicists. Natalie Wolchover checks in on the most recent front-runner in the hunt…

    Fifty-eight years after it first appeared, string theory remains the most popular candidate for the “theory of everything,” the unified mathematical framework for all matter and forces in the universe. This is much to the chagrin of its rather vocal critics. “String theory is not dead; it’s undead and now walks around like a zombie eating people’s brains,” the former physicist Sabine Hossenfelder said on her popular YouTube channel in 2024.

    String theory is a “failure,” the mathematical physicist and blogger Peter Woit often says. His complaint is not that string theory is wrong — it’s that it’s “not even wrong,” as he titled a 2006 book. The theory says that, on scales of billionths of trillionths of trillionths of a centimeter, extra curled-up spatial dimensions reveal themselves and particles resolve into extended objects — strands and loops of energy — rather than points. But this alleged substructure is too small to detect, probably ever. The prediction is untestable.

    A further problem is that uncountably many different configurations of dimensions and strings are permitted at those tiny scales; the theory can give rise to a limitless variety of universes. Amid this vast landscape of solutions, no one can hope to find a precise microscopic configuration that undergirds our particular macroscopic world.

    These issues are profound indeed. Yet in my experience, the typical high-energy theorist in a prestigious university physics department still thinks string theory has a good chance of being correct, at least in part. The field has become siloed between those who deem it worth studying and those who don’t.

    Recently, a new angle of attack has opened up. An approach called bootstrapping has allowed physicists to calculate that, under various starting assumptions about the universe, a key equation from string theory naturally follows. For some experts, these findings support the notion of “string uniqueness,” the idea that it is the only mathematically consistent quantum description of gravity and everything else.

    Responding to one bootstrap paper on her YouTube channel, mere weeks after the “undead” comment, Hossenfelder said it was “string theorists do[ing] something sensible for once.” She added, “I’d say this paper strengthens the argument for string theory.”

    Not everyone agrees, but the findings are reviving an important question. “This question of ‘Does string theory describe the world?’ has just been so taboo,” said Cliff Cheung, a physicist at the California Institute of Technology and an author of the paper discussed by Hossenfelder. Now, “people are actually thinking about it for the first time in decades.”

    Getting wind of this work, I wanted to drill down on the logic and examine how the string hypothesis is faring these days…

    And so she does: “Are Strings Still Our Best Hope for a Theory of Everything?” from @nattyover.bsky.social in @quantamagazine.bsky.social. Eminently worth reading in full.

    Compare/contrast with: “Where Some See Strings, She Sees a Space-Time Made of Fractals.”

    * Jonathan Swift, A Tale of a Tub

    ###

    As we grapple with Godel, we might spare a thought for Hermann Rorschach; he died on this date in 1922. A psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, his education in art helped to spur the development of a set of inkblots that were used experimentally to measure various unconscious parts of the subject’s personality. Rorschach knew the human tendency to project interpretations and feelings onto ambiguous stimuli and believed that the subjective responses of his subjects enabled him to distinguish among them on the basis of their perceptive abilities, intelligence, and emotional characteristics. His method has come to be known as the Rorschach test, iterations of which have continued to be used over the years to help identify personality, psychotic, and neurological disorders.

    Perhaps his insight that we humans tend “to project interpretations and feelings onto ambiguous stimuli” can inform our understanding of physicists trying to construct mental/conceptual models of our reality, which they’ve been doing for a very long time, and of the limitations of that quest.

    source

    #bootstrapping #conceptualModels #culture #Godel #HermannRorschach #history #interpretation #KurtGodel #mentalModels #Physics #projection #RorschachTest #Science #stringTheory #theoryOfEverything
  19. “For what man in the natural state or course of thinking did ever conceive it in his power to reduce the notions of all mankind exactly to the same length, and breadth, and height of his own? Yet this is the first humble and civil design of all innovators in the empire of reason.”*…

    A “theory of everything” (a Grand Unified Theory on steriods)– a (still hypothetical) coherent theoretical framework of physics containing and explaining all physical principles– is the holy grail of physicists. Natalie Wolchover checks in on the most recent front-runner in the hunt…

    Fifty-eight years after it first appeared, string theory remains the most popular candidate for the “theory of everything,” the unified mathematical framework for all matter and forces in the universe. This is much to the chagrin of its rather vocal critics. “String theory is not dead; it’s undead and now walks around like a zombie eating people’s brains,” the former physicist Sabine Hossenfelder said on her popular YouTube channel in 2024.

    String theory is a “failure,” the mathematical physicist and blogger Peter Woit often says. His complaint is not that string theory is wrong — it’s that it’s “not even wrong,” as he titled a 2006 book. The theory says that, on scales of billionths of trillionths of trillionths of a centimeter, extra curled-up spatial dimensions reveal themselves and particles resolve into extended objects — strands and loops of energy — rather than points. But this alleged substructure is too small to detect, probably ever. The prediction is untestable.

    A further problem is that uncountably many different configurations of dimensions and strings are permitted at those tiny scales; the theory can give rise to a limitless variety of universes. Amid this vast landscape of solutions, no one can hope to find a precise microscopic configuration that undergirds our particular macroscopic world.

    These issues are profound indeed. Yet in my experience, the typical high-energy theorist in a prestigious university physics department still thinks string theory has a good chance of being correct, at least in part. The field has become siloed between those who deem it worth studying and those who don’t.

    Recently, a new angle of attack has opened up. An approach called bootstrapping has allowed physicists to calculate that, under various starting assumptions about the universe, a key equation from string theory naturally follows. For some experts, these findings support the notion of “string uniqueness,” the idea that it is the only mathematically consistent quantum description of gravity and everything else.

    Responding to one bootstrap paper on her YouTube channel, mere weeks after the “undead” comment, Hossenfelder said it was “string theorists do[ing] something sensible for once.” She added, “I’d say this paper strengthens the argument for string theory.”

    Not everyone agrees, but the findings are reviving an important question. “This question of ‘Does string theory describe the world?’ has just been so taboo,” said Cliff Cheung, a physicist at the California Institute of Technology and an author of the paper discussed by Hossenfelder. Now, “people are actually thinking about it for the first time in decades.”

    Getting wind of this work, I wanted to drill down on the logic and examine how the string hypothesis is faring these days…

    And so she does: “Are Strings Still Our Best Hope for a Theory of Everything?” from @nattyover.bsky.social in @quantamagazine.bsky.social. Eminently worth reading in full.

    Compare/contrast with: “Where Some See Strings, She Sees a Space-Time Made of Fractals.”

    * Jonathan Swift, A Tale of a Tub

    ###

    As we grapple with Godel, we might spare a thought for Hermann Rorschach; he died on this date in 1922. A psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, his education in art helped to spur the development of a set of inkblots that were used experimentally to measure various unconscious parts of the subject’s personality. Rorschach knew the human tendency to project interpretations and feelings onto ambiguous stimuli and believed that the subjective responses of his subjects enabled him to distinguish among them on the basis of their perceptive abilities, intelligence, and emotional characteristics. His method has come to be known as the Rorschach test, iterations of which have continued to be used over the years to help identify personality, psychotic, and neurological disorders.

    Perhaps his insight that we humans tend “to project interpretations and feelings onto ambiguous stimuli” can inform our understanding of physicists trying to construct mental/conceptual models of our reality, which they’ve been doing for a very long time, and of the limitations of that quest.

    source

    #bootstrapping #conceptualModels #culture #Godel #HermannRorschach #history #interpretation #KurtGodel #mentalModels #Physics #projection #RorschachTest #Science #stringTheory #theoryOfEverything
  20. Over the years I've built systems—initially using traditional analytics and now increasingly using AI—that monitor and evaluate risk across multiple areas

    Read more 👉 lttr.ai/ApwGf

    #mentalmodels #howto #productivity