What Is the Role of Fast Processes In Not-Justified-Inferentially Judgements?
Philosophy is thinking in slow motion (Campbell). But then how could fast
processes be relevant? Fast processes have little or no direct influence over
non-justified-inferentially judgements. Despite this, they may dominate through
indirect influence where knowledge is absent. For fast processes
give rise to appearances
(and high subjective confidence). These appearances provide material for reflection.
In the absence of knowledge, reflection on how things appear is likely to
determine how you judge them to be. In this way, fast processes can dominate,
albeit indirectly, even glacial not-justified-inferentially judgements.
Notes
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Glossary
automatic :
As we use the term, a process is automatic just if whether or not it
occurs is to a significant extent independent of your current task,
motivations and intentions. To say that mindreading is automatic is
to say that it involves only automatic processes. The term `automatic' has
been used in a variety of ways by other authors: see
Moors (2014, p. 22) for a one-page overview,
Moors & De Houwer (2006) for a detailed theoretical review, or
Bargh (1992) for a classic and very readable introduction
cognitively efficient :
A process is cognitively efficient to the degree that it does not consume working
memory and other scarce cognitive resources.
fast :
A fast process is one that is to
to some interesting degree cognitively efficient
(and therefore likely also some interesting degree automatic).
These processes are also sometimes
characterised as able to yield rapid responses.
Since automaticity and cognitive efficiency are matters of degree, it is only strictly
correct to identify some processes as faster than others.
The fast-slow distinction has been variously characterised in ways that do not
entirely overlap (even individual author have offered differing characterisations
at different times; e.g.
Kahneman, 2013; Morewedge & Kahneman, 2010;
Kahneman & Klein, 2009; Kahneman, 2002):
as its advocates stress,
it is a rough-and-ready tool rather than an element in a rigorous theory.
not-justified-inferentially :
A claim (or premise, or principle) is not-justified-inferentially if it is not
justified in virtue of being inferred from some other claim (or premise, or principle).
Claims made on the basis of perception (That jumper is red, say) are typically
not-justified-inferentially.
Why not just say ‘noninferentially justified’? Because that can be read as implying that
the claim is justified, noninferentially. Whereas ‘not-justified-inferentially’ does not imply this.
Any claim which is not justified at all is thereby not-justified-inferentially.
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