Thinking in consequences
When we evaluate an argument, a plan, or even a daily choice, we often focus on the immediate facts and overlook the ripple effects that follow. Thinking in consequences—the habit…
When we evaluate an argument, a plan, or even a daily choice, we often focus on the immediate facts and overlook the ripple effects that follow. Thinking in consequences—the habit…
Thinking in consequences is a specialized subset of logical reasoning that prioritizes mapping downstream causal effects over immediate outcomes. Unlike impulsive decision-making, this framework requires you to trace the second,…
Most people make decisions by weighing immediate pros and cons: Will this boost this quarter’s revenue? Will this save me time today? But logic in decision making demands we look…
When we evaluate arguments, plan projects, or simply choose a dinner menu, we are constantly weighing the outcomes of our choices. This mental process is called thinking in consequences—the habit…
Every day we make choices—what to eat for breakfast, which project to prioritize, or whether to invest in a new technology. While some decisions feel trivial, most have ripples that…