It seems to me that general education courses, freshman and sophomore courses in college, are intended to provide "the big picture". — Bitter Crank
I would prefer the big picture first, but in practice I need to start with the details and move toward the big picture as my understanding grows. It can be frustrating. :wink: — Pattern-chaser
↪Pattern-chaser
Neither the 'big picture' nor the 'granular' approach are exclusive, and we combine them all the time. — Bitter Crank
What exactly is global learning though?
I would say it is when one's classification or understanding of a particular phenomenon is informed by its relationship to the whole/greater system in which it is situated/functions/interacts/evolved. Knowing the outcomes or function or purpose of a system can make it easy to anticipate the outcomes, functions, or purposes of its various parts. (i.e: if you're trying to fix a broken machine, it's very helpful to know beforehand what that machine actually does). This is a kind of teleological approach to classification and anticipation, and it seems to make the most sense when applied to complex systems with clearly discernible evolved or designed purposes. Here we derive general rules to anticipate parts from what we know about the whole. The limitation of this approach is that we're more or less stuck generalizing about sub-components (which could be observed, described and understood with greater precision) from our initial assumptions about the whole. — VagabondSpectre
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