by Matthew Rehrl MD | Blogging
The case for diversity in the workforce is quite overwhelming, but how about the case for diversity of ideas within an individual blog? For example, consider my blog, which currently has 54 Topic Categories. I have Categories ranging from AI Ethics, Healthcare Ethics,...
by Matthew Rehrl MD | Blogging, Writing Habits
When blogging, often less is more.
by Matthew Rehrl MD | Blogging
May was a good month for me: Thirty-one posts on a variety of subjects, ranging from infinite games, Sun Tzu, and Chaucer to wicked problems, Covid battlefield topology, and healthcare data ownership. But the my best post in my judgement? (Or, at least my most...
by Matthew Rehrl MD | Blogging, Definition of Health
Although my most interesting blog post in April was When Mathematics And Physics Meet (after all, everyone likes a post about the highest levels of scientific thought), my most important post was Definitions and Essentialism: Plato. Its importance isn’t based on it...
by Matthew Rehrl MD | Blogging, Creativity, Photography, Writing
I find the creative relationship between some of my blog posts and photography interesting. For example, in the blue heart photo, used in the post A Flaw in NLP-Enabled EHRs?, I am using the stone’s central scratch to highlight the concept of a flaw. In the...
by Matthew Rehrl MD | Blogging, Writing
Should I blog more often—or even exclusively—in the first person? The author of the classic writing guide Writing Well would say yes: “Writers are obviously at their most natural when they write in the first person. Writing is an intimate transaction between two...