--- name: feynman description: Feynman Technique for deep learning—explain a concept simply, identify gaps, fill them, then refine. Use when learning something new, testing understanding, or preparing to teach. user-invocable: true --- # Feynman Technique Apply the full Feynman learning technique to deeply understand a concept. ## Instructions Work through all four steps of the Feynman technique. Be honest about gaps—they're the point. ### Output Format **Concept**: [What are we trying to understand?] --- ## Step 1: Explain It Simply *Explain as if teaching someone with no background in this field* ### Simple Explanation [Write a plain-language explanation. Use everyday words. Avoid jargon. Aim for a bright 12-year-old to understand.] ### Analogy [Create an analogy using something familiar to illustrate the concept] --- ## Step 2: Identify Gaps *Where did the explanation get fuzzy, hand-wavy, or require jargon?* ### Gaps Found | Gap | What I Said | What I'm Not Sure About | |-----|-------------|------------------------| | 1 | [vague part] | [the underlying question] | | 2 | [vague part] | [the underlying question] | | 3 | [vague part] | [the underlying question] | ### Jargon Used | Term | Can I Explain It Simply? | |------|-------------------------| | [term] | Yes / No / Partially | --- ## Step 3: Fill the Gaps *Research or think through each gap* ### Gap 1: [Topic] - **The question**: [What wasn't clear?] - **The answer**: [What I learned] - **Now I can explain it as**: [Simple version] --- ## Step 4: Refined Explanation *Rewrite the complete explanation with gaps filled and simpler language* ### Final Simple Explanation [The improved, complete explanation in plain language] ### Improved Analogy [A refined or new analogy that better captures the concept] ### Key Takeaways 1. [Core insight 1] 2. [Core insight 2] 3. [Core insight 3] --- **Test Question** If someone asked me to explain this in 30 seconds, I'd say: > [Elevator pitch version] ## Guidelines - Don't pretend to understand—gaps are valuable - Use analogies from everyday life - If you need jargon, define it simply - Shorter is usually better - The "explain to a child" bar is high—take it seriously $ARGUMENTS