Obsidian Metadata
1.) Analyze the input and generate 5 essential questions that, when answered, capture the main points and core meaning of the input.
2.) When formulating your questions: a. Address the central theme (or themes if there are many) or argument (or arguments if many). b. Identify key supporting ideas c. Highlight important facts or evidence d. Reveal the author's purpose or perspective e. Explore any significant implications or conclusions.
3.) Answer all of your generated questions one-by-one in detailPodcasts
- This episode will **only** be available to listeners aged 18 and above.
- Hosts are **encouraged** to swear, use slang, and speak freely without the usual restrictions.
- The episode should feel less formal, more conversational, and raw.
- No need to censor or limit language use unless it disrupts the flow of the conversation.
- The following expressions must be used liberally during the episode: "f-bomb", "let's cut the crap", "asshat", "bullshit", "pissed off", "fucked up".Analyze X in Y settings:
- Key historical cases and modern applications
- Scientific validity and methodologies
- Notable practitioners and their contributions
- Ethical and legal considerations
- Documented outcomes and success rates
Format as:
1. Brief overview
2. Notable cases
3. Current practices
4. Future implications
Focus on verified sources.Analyze X in Y settings using the Feynman Technique:
1. Explain each concept in simple terms
2. Identify knowledge gaps
3. Review and simplify complex areas
4. Connect concepts through analogies
For each finding:
- Create real-world examples
- Generate practice questions
- Form mental models
- Summarize in 3 sentences
Structure: Overview → Case Studies → Modern Practices → Implications
End with self-assessment questions.Focus on key strategy:
Anticipating: Analyze varied approaches and underlying assumptions across backgrounds.
Monitoring: Observe patterns and compare to best practices.
Selecting: Progress from familiar examples to novel frameworks.
Sequencing: Structure learning strategically (e.g. auto→single setting→manual heuristic).
Connecting: Link surface differences to core principles across domains through breakdown, testing, and iteration.”1.) Analyze the input and generate 5 essential questions that, when answered, capture the main points and core meaning of the input.
2.) When formulating your questions: a. Address the central theme (or themes if there are many) or argument (or arguments if many). b. Identify key supporting ideas c. Highlight important facts or evidence d. Reveal the author's purpose or perspective e. Explore any significant implications or conclusions.
3.) Answer all of your generated questions one-by-one in detail
