The Watson/Holmes Modes of Thought

As Holmes reminds us, “Like all other arts, the Science of Deduction and Analysis is one which can only be acquired by long and patient study nor is life long enough to allow any mortal to attain the highest possible perfection in it.” But it’s also more than mere fancy. In essence, it comes down to one simple formula: to move from a System Watson– to a System Holmes–governed thinking takes mindfulness plus motivation. (That, and a lot of practice.) Mindfulness, in the sense of constant presence of mind, the attentiveness and hereness that is so essential for real, active observation of the world. Motivation, in the sense of active engagement and desire.

When we do such decidedly unremarkable things as misplacing our keys or losing our glasses only to find them on our head, System Watson is to blame: we go on a sort of autopilot and don’t note our actions as we make them. It’s why we often forget what we were doing if we’re interrupted, why we stand in the middle of the kitchen wondering why we’ve entered it. System Holmes offers the type of retracing of steps that requires attentive recall, so that we break the autopilot and instead remember just where and why we did what we did. We aren’t motivated or mindful all the time, and mostly it doesn’t matter. We do things mindlessly to conserve our resources for something more important than the location of our keys.

Notes:

Watson is on autopilot, Holmes is mindfulness.

Folksonomies: mindfulness

Keywords:
highest possible perfection (0.975849 (positive:0.875412)), Thought Watson (0.855002 (neutral:0.000000)), mere fancy (0.852687 (neutral:0.000000)), Watson/Holmes Modes (0.847030 (neutral:0.000000)), attentive recall (0.825978 (positive:0.479706)), unremarkable things (0.820552 (negative:-0.898577)), autopilot (0.809796 (negative:-0.444708)), Holmes–governed thinking (0.804764 (neutral:0.000000)), constant presence (0.801203 (neutral:0.000000)), active observation (0.791178 (positive:0.381745)), kitchen wondering (0.786869 (positive:0.243899)), active engagement (0.783369 (positive:0.416864)), mindfulness (0.765143 (positive:0.445380)), n’t matter (0.757728 (neutral:0.000000)), motivation (0.595793 (positive:0.240552)), sense (0.574919 (neutral:0.000000)), keys (0.574389 (negative:-0.263323)), Deduction (0.511126 (positive:0.458736)), blame (0.491655 (negative:-0.603338)), essence (0.488237 (positive:0.251938)), study (0.482670 (negative:-0.449323)), arts (0.481962 (neutral:0.000000)), Science (0.481871 (neutral:0.000000)), Analysis (0.481564 (positive:0.458736)), sort (0.480539 (neutral:0.000000)), desire (0.479503 (positive:0.416864)), glasses (0.479270 (negative:-0.794694)), formula (0.478972 (neutral:0.000000)), life (0.478270 (negative:-0.718109)), simple (0.475068 (neutral:0.000000))

Concepts:
Mind (0.961717): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Thought (0.592624): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Cognition (0.561584): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Mindfulness (0.496358): dbpedia
Motivation (0.482725): dbpedia | freebase

 Mastermind: How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Konnikova , Maria (2013-01-03), Mastermind: How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes, Viking Adult, Retrieved on 2013-03-21
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  • Folksonomies: psychology mindfulness