When Logic Becomes a Story: Teaching Children How to Think
Children do not need heavy theories in order to begin learning how to think. They need stories. They need characters.
Children do not need heavy theories in order to begin learning how to think. They need stories. They need characters.
A notebook is one of the simplest tools humans have created. It gives thought a place to land. A page…
When people hear the phrase Assisted Intelligence, they often think of technology. A digital assistant. An application. An algorithm. A…
A thought can be written down without becoming clear. This is one of the quiet problems hidden inside ordinary notebooks,…
We have many tools for writing. Notebooks, journals, planners, digital documents, calendars, note-taking apps, task lists, templates, and systems designed…
Cognitive Stationery began as a practical idea. At first, it appeared as a way to support thinking through physical pages,…
Co-thinking with artificial intelligence is not the same as asking a machine for an answer. It is a different kind…
Artificial intelligence is powerful because it can process patterns. It can recognize language, compare information, generate responses, summarize complexity, and…
The human mind does not think in one layer. A thought may appear as one sentence, one feeling, one decision,…
Artificial intelligence can show many possible directions. It can summarize, compare, organize, explain, generate, translate, analyze, and suggest. It can…
People often say that artificial intelligence “lies.” This is understandable. When AI gives a confident answer that turns out to…
Confusion is often treated as a sign that something has gone wrong. A person feels unclear, overwhelmed, uncertain, scattered, or…
Human-AI cognition does not begin with replacement. It begins with relationship. Artificial intelligence can process language, recognize patterns, organize information,…
Understanding artificial intelligence without confusing it with human consciousness Artificial intelligence does not begin with lived experience. It does not…
Human cognition does not begin with a sentence. Before a person explains, defines, describes, or argues, something quieter has already…