A recent hypothesis I’ve had, which seems obvious, is that knowledge that goes unapplied or unexercised tends to fade away faster than does knowledge that is applied or exercised. Knowledge atrophy.
This, combined with the hypothesis that intuitive knowledge is more resilient than memorized knowledge, is becoming more of an integral principle to this program.
In other words, it now seems like this program should be optimized around both developing an intuitive understanding of the subject matters, and keeping these understandings actively engaged in problem solving.
Problem solving, itself, is a major philosophic axiom of this program. The cultivation of knowledge to be operationalized somehow. But this eventual operationalization must remain a horizon for the time being.
Nonetheless, it should be planned for.
One potential protocol would be to boil down most of the subjects into condensed capsules of information, such as a diagram, to be shelved to make time for some impending operation.
Be that operation a business venture, a crisis of some sort, or any kind of commitment that would preclude the unabridged continuation of MoGenPro, having such a shelving protocol in place would seem strategic.
So what, explicitly, would be the purpose of the shelving protocol? To boil down the accumulated knowledge of a given topic into a package of information that may be readily unpacked, should the continuation of the study of that topic be warranted.
This means the area of knowledge in question will have to remain more or less dormant for some period of time, which contradicts the initial stated aim of keeping a topical body of knowledge active, of exercising it. To mitigate the decay of this knowledge, it must be packaged in a sufficiently intuitive manner, to expedite its eventual reuptake.
But most likely, should a focus-worthy operation enter the scene, multiple shelving protocols will have to be executed in parallel.
This is why I stress the importance of a good, intuitive diagram, but that will be the topic of another post, as I am trying to keep these relatively short.