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158 points WanderingSoul | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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gwd ◴[] No.45415701[source]
Can I make a distinction between "friction" and "effort"?

If you're riding a bike up a hill, you can't go up without effort. But not all of your effort is actually moving you up the hill -- some of it is being lost in friction: inefficiencies in your muscles, friction in your gears and wheel and chain, wind resistance.

Similarly, you can't learn anything without effort; but it's often the case that effort you put in ends up wasted: if you're learning a language, time spent looking for content rather than studying content is friction; effort spent forcing yourself to read something that's too hard is effort you could have spent more profitably elsewhere.

Put that way, we should minimize friction, so that we can maximize the amount our effort goes towards actually growing.

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1. jvanderbot ◴[] No.45417403[source]
In a friction-less environment, effort produces no progress. Thank you for coming to my HN rebuttal.

All analogies are wrong, but some are useful.