1. Parkinson's Law. If you have a task but no clear deadline, you waste 90% of your time. To get things done faster, assign a "due date" to the project. And give yourself a little less time than you actually need. Understand and use the power of deadlines.
2. Occam's Razor Paradox. More often than not, the right solution is the simplest one. The explanation too. And if something seems complicated, always remember that in reality the subject is simpler, and you are just looking “in the wrong place.” Change your approach.
3. The paradox of bragging. The more someone brags, the less successful they are. The desire to brag is a mask of insecurity. It is loud. While the face of confidence, on the contrary, loves silence, as well as happiness. If someone brags about something, divide everything they say by two or even four.
4. The Dunning-Kruger Effect: The more you know, the more you can learn. So expanding your horizons, reading, improving, and learning new things are things that the more you do, the more they give you.
5. The Medici Effect. Diversity stimulates creativity. Innovations arise from the combination of known ideas from different fields. That is why innovation centers are located in large cities, and not somewhere in the wilderness, like factories.
6. Gall's Law. All complex systems in the world are the result of a combination of simpler systems that work separately. So if you develop a "complex system" from scratch, it will never work. Start with the simple. Expand and develop things consistently.
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