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The Feynman Technique: Learn by Teaching

Richard Feynman, Nobel Prize-winning physicist, was famous for his ability to explain complex concepts in simple terms. His secret? If you can't explain something simply, you don't understand it well enough. This insight became the foundation of one of the most powerful learning techniques ever developed.

What is the Feynman Technique?

The Feynman Technique is a four-step method for learning anything deeply. It works by forcing you to identify gaps in your understanding and fill them through targeted study. The core principle: teaching a concept to someone else (or pretending to) reveals what you actually know versus what you think you know.

Core Insight: Jargon and complex vocabulary often mask shallow understanding. True mastery means you can explain a concept using simple language that anyone can understand.

The Four Steps of the Feynman Technique

Step 1: Choose a Concept

Pick a topic you want to understand. Write its name at the top of a blank page. This could be anything from photosynthesis to blockchain to Keynesian economics.

Step 2: Teach It to a Child

Write out an explanation as if you're teaching it to a 12-year-old. Use simple language. Avoid jargon. If you find yourself using technical terms, stop and define them in plain English.

Why a child? Because children don't understand complex vocabulary or abstract concepts. They need concrete examples and clear logic. If you can make a child understand, you truly understand.

Step 3: Identify Gaps

While writing your explanation, you'll hit points where you struggle. Maybe you can't explain why something works, or you catch yourself using circular logic. These are your knowledge gaps—the exact areas you need to study.

This is the magic step. Most study methods don't reveal what you don't know. The Feynman Technique makes your blind spots obvious.

Step 4: Simplify and Use Analogies

Go back to your sources and fill in the gaps. Then rewrite your explanation, simplifying further. Use analogies to connect the concept to things your "student" already understands.

Good analogies bridge the gap between the familiar and the unfamiliar. They're the secret weapon of great teachers.

Why the Feynman Technique Works

Practical Tips for Using the Technique

Actually Write It Down

Don't just think through the explanation. Write it. The act of writing forces clarity that thinking alone doesn't. Use pen and paper or a digital note-taking app.

Find a Real Audience

If possible, actually teach someone. A friend, family member, or study partner. Their questions will reveal gaps you didn't notice on your own.

Embrace the Struggle

Feeling confused when you try to explain something isn't failure—it's the whole point. The technique is working when it reveals what you don't know.

Example in Action

Concept: Machine Learning

First attempt: "Machine learning uses algorithms to find patterns in data and make predictions based on statistical models."

Gap identified: What exactly is an algorithm? How does it "find" patterns?

Final explanation: "Imagine teaching a child to recognize dogs. You show them thousands of pictures—some dogs, some cats, some birds. At first, they guess randomly. But each time you tell them 'yes, that's a dog' or 'no, that's a cat,' they learn. Machine learning is like that child. It looks at millions of examples, makes guesses, and gradually learns from its mistakes. The 'algorithm' is just the set of rules for how it learns from each mistake."

When to Use the Feynman Technique

This technique is especially powerful for:

Start Learning Deeply

Pick a concept you've been struggling with. Spend 20 minutes applying the Feynman Technique. You'll likely discover that what seemed like a complex topic has just a few core ideas—and you'll understand them better than ever before.

Remember: simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. If you can't explain it simply, keep studying.