I don’t think there is a single link, though most of the concepts have a pretty good canonical resource. I do think it usually takes quite a bit of text to convey each of those concepts, so I don’t think creating a single written reference is easily feasible, unless someone wants to produce multiple books worth of content (I’ve historically been impressed with how much content you can convey in a 1.5 hour long class, often 10 blog posts worth, or about half of a book).
I don’t think I have the time to compile a full list of resources for each of these concepts, but I will share the top things that come to mind.
Units of Exchange: I think microeconomics classes do a pretty good job of this, though are usually a bit abstract. A lot of writing of Scott Alexander gets at this, with the best introduction probably being his “Efficient Charity: Do unto others...”
Inner Simulator: Covered pretty well by Thinking: Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
Trigger-Action Planning: Also covered pretty well by Thinking Fast and Slow, though, with some Getting Things Done thrown into it
Goal Factoring: I don’t actually know a good introduction to this, alas.
I don’t think there is a single link, though most of the concepts have a pretty good canonical resource. I do think it usually takes quite a bit of text to convey each of those concepts, so I don’t think creating a single written reference is easily feasible, unless someone wants to produce multiple books worth of content (I’ve historically been impressed with how much content you can convey in a 1.5 hour long class, often 10 blog posts worth, or about half of a book).
I don’t think I have the time to compile a full list of resources for each of these concepts, but I will share the top things that come to mind.
Units of Exchange: I think microeconomics classes do a pretty good job of this, though are usually a bit abstract. A lot of writing of Scott Alexander gets at this, with the best introduction probably being his “Efficient Charity: Do unto others...”
Inner Simulator: Covered pretty well by Thinking: Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
Trigger-Action Planning: Also covered pretty well by Thinking Fast and Slow, though, with some Getting Things Done thrown into it
Goal Factoring: I don’t actually know a good introduction to this, alas.
Understanding Shoulds: Mindingourway.com’s “Replacing Guilt” series
Focusing: The best introduction into this is Gendlin’s audiobook, which I highly recommend and is relatively short
Systemization: As mentioned, Getting Things Done is the best introduction into this topic
Double Crux: I think Duncan Sabien’s introduction for this is probably the best one