Noticing that I’m more likely to gravitate strongly toward disciplines once I can place its theory into a historical narrative.
Began to study networking protocols after reading STS-laced histories of the development of TCP/IP and the OSI protocols.
Am now invested in becoming a decent chess player after learning about the succession of schools of chess theory.
Seeing how domain knowledge accretes over time makes it easier to engage fields that would otherwise seem too complex to approach.
@Navertal I've noticed this for music genres
@Connor tell me more!
@Navertal As one example, I took a college music theory course that was 80% Italian Baroque music (which is usually pleasant but a bit cliche and repetitive). After spending three months listening to it intensively and doing exercises like composing in Baroque style, I had internalized the musical idiom enough that the genre's cliches just made sense in an incredibly satisfying way, and the little innovations in works by more adventurous composers like Bach actually sounded revolutionary.