dunya wrote:
I also understand in "concepts". I find putting stuff I know into words verbally or on paper difficult. I spend a lot of time practicing putting my conceptual thoughts into words so I can communicate them coherently. It's not easy.
I get what you mean about having a concept of a dog.
I find it difficult to learn stuff by rote. I have to know why in order to create a concept to remember.
When I read fiction I generally have to make an effort to form particular visual images. For example if I want to remember how a character's physique is described by the writer. I generally don't have a visual for the faces of the characters unless the writer is describing them in detail as I read.
Mostly I have a sense of what is happening along with a vague stream of visual images. For example if a writer describes a small detail I will form a mental image of that detail, but not fill it out to create a whole scene of which that detail is a part.
I
TOTALLY get what you are describing. When I first came across this thread with the phrase "Thinking in concepts", I began thinking about my thinking and other ways of thinking and spent hours searching for more information. I read mostly about visual and analytical thinking, and determined that my analytical thinking is very poor. But when it comes to thinking in concepts, there is almost no information out there. This thread is most of whats available on the topic.
If anyone has any more info on conceptual thinking, especially on how to cope or take advantage of it, it would be greatly appreciated.