Apply a Munger-style latticework of mental models from multiple disciplines to analyze a problem. Use when the user needs multi-disciplinary perspective, wants to avoid single-framework bias, or needs to triangulate insights from physics, biology, psychology, economics, math, and history simultaneously.
Mental models are simplified representations of how the world works, drawn from multiple disciplines. Charlie Munger's key insight: you need a latticework of mental models from many fields — not just one hammer looking for nails. By viewing a problem through multiple disciplinary lenses simultaneously, you get triangulated wisdom that no single perspective can provide. The goal is to have ~100 models and know when each applies.
Analyze the current topic or problem under discussion through the latticework of mental models. Apply models from at least 6 different disciplines. Cross-reference and triangulate. Apply this framework to whatever the user is currently working on or asking about.
Apply relevant models:
Which physics/engineering model is most illuminating here, and what does it reveal?
Which biological model fits best, and what does it predict?
Which psychological model explains the most about the human behavior in this situation?
Which economic model is most relevant, and what does it prescribe?
Which mathematical model provides the clearest insight?
Which historical/philosophical model offers the deepest wisdom?
Now synthesize across all six lenses:
"To the man with only a hammer, every problem looks like a nail." The cure is a toolbox full of mental models from every discipline. Use them all, trust no single one, and pay attention when they disagree.38:["$","$L41",null,{"content":"$42","frontMatter":{"name":"mental-models","description":"Apply a Munger-style latticework of mental models from multiple disciplines to analyze a problem. Use when the user needs multi-disciplinary perspective, wants to avoid single-framework bias, or needs to triangulate insights from physics, biology, psychology, economics, math, and history simultaneously."}}]