Brain Hacks Podcast: Master the Feynman Technique for Cognitive Enhancement and Deep Learning

Brain Hacks Podcast: Master the Feynman Technique for Cognitive Enhancement and Deep Learning

3:48 Feb 1, 2026
About this episode
This is the Brain Hacks Podcast!Today we're diving into a fascinating cognitive enhancement technique called "The Feynman Technique" - named after the legendary physicist Richard Feynman, who was basically the rock star of quantum mechanics and had a brain that operated like a supercomputer running on pure curiosity.Here's the beautiful thing about this hack: it doesn't require any fancy equipment, supplements, or standing on your head while humming the periodic table. All you need is paper, a pen, and the willingness to admit you might not know something as well as you think you do.So here's how it works:**Step One: Pick Your Topic**Choose something you want to truly understand - could be blockchain, photosynthesis, why your cat acts like a tiny furry dictator, whatever. Write it at the top of a blank page.**Step Two: Teach It to a Child**Now here's where the magic happens. Explain the concept as if you're teaching it to a twelve-year-old. No jargon. No technical mumbo-jumbo. Just simple, clear language. This is harder than it sounds! When you try to explain quantum entanglement without using the word "quantum" or "entanglement," your brain has to work in completely different ways.**Step Three: Identify the Gaps**As you're writing, you'll hit walls. Suddenly you'll realize you're using circular logic or you can't explain WHY something happens, only THAT it happens. Congratulations! You've just found the holes in your understanding. Circle these gaps in red. These are your treasure maps to actual learning.**Step Four: Go Back to the Source**Return to your study materials, but this time you're not just passively reading. You're hunting for specific answers to fill those gaps. This targeted learning is exponentially more effective than highlighting passages and hoping the information osmoses into your brain.**Step Five: Simplify and Use Analogies**Take another pass at your explanation. Make it even simpler. Create analogies. Feynman was famous for comparing complex physics to everyday scenarios. He once explained why trains stay on tracks using the same logic as why your coffee cup stays put on your dashboard (until you brake hard, anyway).**Why This Works:**Your brain has two modes of understanding: "recognition" and "recall." Recognition is when you read something and think, "Oh yeah, that makes sense!" But that's shallow learning. It's like thinking you can play guitar because you enjoyed a concert. Recall - actually explaining it from scratch - that's deep learning. That's when neural pathways get reinforced and new connections form.The Feynman Technique forces you into recall mode. It exposes what psychologists call "the illusion of explanatory depth" - our tendency to think we understand complex things when we really only have surface-level knowledge.Plus, simplifying con
Select an episode
0:00 0:00