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> It turned out that a simple drawing could capture the entire statement of the theorem, and from that drawing, the proof was trivial to derive.

Excellent point.

1. A similar example: Feynman diagrams.

2. Another: Venn diagrams.

3. Longer example: On Navy nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, the officer of the deck underway (OOD) must have at least a basic understanding of how the engineering plant works. It's second nature for nuclear-trained OODs, of course, but non-nukes could sometimes have trouble. Back in the day, it turned out that an effective way to help non-nukes learn what they needed to know was to have them: (A) memorize a really-simple block diagram of the reactor and steam system, and also (B) memorize a chant, of modest length, that summarized how things worked. During slow periods while standing OOD watch, I'd make a non-nuke OOD trainee draw the diagram from memory; then I'd quiz him with "what if ..." questions (back then it was always "him"). If he got hung up on a question, I'd tell him, "chant the chant." That usually helped him figure out the answer in short order.

(U.S. submarines don't have that problem, AFAIK, because pretty much every officer who will stand OOD watches is nuclear-trained.)



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