Question
How do I practice testing mental models?
Quick Answer
Select one schema you hold with high confidence — a belief about how something works in your life, your team, or your field. Write it as a falsifiable claim: 'I believe [X] because [Y], and if [Z] happened, it would prove me wrong.' Then identify one observable test you could run in the next seven.
The most direct way to practice testing mental models is through a focused exercise: Select one schema you hold with high confidence — a belief about how something works in your life, your team, or your field. Write it as a falsifiable claim: 'I believe [X] because [Y], and if [Z] happened, it would prove me wrong.' Then identify one observable test you could run in the next seven days. The test does not need to be elaborate. It needs to be honest — genuinely capable of producing a result that contradicts your belief. Write down what result would confirm your schema and what result would challenge it, before you run the test.
Common pitfall: Treating emotional conviction as evidence of validity. The failure pattern is: the schema feels true, you have held it for a long time, important decisions rest on it, therefore it must be correct. This is the unfalsified-hypothesis trap — a schema that has never been tested but has accumulated so much psychological investment that testing it feels unnecessary or even threatening. You will know you are in this trap when the suggestion of testing a belief triggers defensiveness rather than curiosity.
This practice connects to Phase 15 (Schema Validation) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
Learn more in these lessons