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Charles E.

Charles E.

Writer and Editor at Ambient Thinkers Media

PhilosophyPsychologyScience

The Two Dials: How Cognitive Ease Shapes Our Decisions

by Charles E. December 17, 2024

Imagine two dials in your brain, constantly adjusting in response to every decision you make. One measures cognitive ease—the realm of the familiar and intuitive. The other tracks cognitive strain—the territory of unfamiliarity, careful analysis, and skepticism. Understanding these mental mechanisms isn’t just an academic exercise; it’s the key to comprehending why we trust certain information instinctively while questioning others, why some messages persuade us effortlessly while others leave us dubious. This term “cognitive ease” was surfaced to critique by Daniel Kahneman, a Nobel laureate who has published several empirical findings on human rationality. Kahneman described cognitive ease in his book “Thinking, Fast and Slow,” where he summarizes all his findings and research on cognitive biases.

Evolution

Our brains have evolved to favor cognitive ease. In this article we will term this phenomenon Law of Least Effort– a preference that served our ancestors well in their quest for survival. Naturally we are averse to unknown stimuli and attracted to familiar stimuli, in the first instance our brain goes “things are going well – no threats so no need to redirect attention or mobilize effort” (Khaneman). This evolutionary thinking manifests today in what psychologists call the “illusion of familiarity.” When something feels familiar, our brain processes it with cognitive ease, making it stand out more clearly in our perception than unfamiliar elements.

Decision Making

This phenomenon has profound implications for how we make decisions today, especially when we’re uncertain. When faced with multiple options and no clear logical solution, we tend to gravitate toward the familiar choice, often convinced it must be the right one. Have you ever taken an exam and said to yourself “This can’t be the correct answer I have never heard of it!” or answer choices have been “blind” to you because of lack of unfamiliarity? Remember the law of least effort, your brain will always try to maximize cognitive ease and minimize cognitive strain. Now consider how this plays out in academic settings: students reviewing multiple-choice questions often find themselves more drawn to answers containing familiar terms or concepts, sometimes even convincing themselves these must be correct simply because they feel right. This isn’t mere coincidence—our brains are actually programmed to suppress unfamiliar information that might cause cognitive strain. The power of familiarity extends beyond decision-making into the realm of emotional responses.

Mere Exposure Effect

Research by American social psychologist Robert Zajonc, revealed what is termed the “mere exposure effect”—the tendency for people to develop positive feelings toward things simply because they’re familiar with them. Remarkably, this effect doesn’t even require conscious awareness of the exposure. This finding reveals how our fast, intuitive thinking system can influence our preferences before our more analytical system even is able to engage. Deeply understanding these cognitive mechanisms can be helpful in communication techniques such as persuasion. Anyone that participates in the field of selling or persuasive speaking will tell you that simply stating truth isn’t enough to convince an audience—the message must be delivered in a way that minimizes cognitive strain. This explains why clear, simple language often proves more persuasive than complex vocabulary. A Princeton study called Problems with Using Long Words Needlessly by Daniel M Oppenheimer found that using unnecessarily elaborate language actually diminished perceived credibility and intelligence. I recall personally, a year ago when I was writing my medical school personal statement, I remember a wise quote that was said to me by a medical student then, “People who lack a clear message will often hide behind flowery and verbose wording.” By using unfamiliar language you are exposing your audience to cognitive strain which can distort the message you are trying to say.

Mood Interplay

Even our moods play a crucial role in this cognitive dance. As noted by Kahneman in his book, when we’re happy, we experience increased cognitive ease, making us more likely to rely on intuitive thinking. Conversely, negative moods increase cognitive strain, leading to more vigilant and skeptical thinking. This suggests that while good moods might make us more creative and trusting, they might also make us more susceptible to accepting things without proper scrutiny. The implications of these findings extend far beyond academic interest. They affect how we process information, make decisions, and interact with the world around us. In an era of information overload, understanding the interplay between cognitive ease and strain becomes crucial for both consuming and communicating information effectively.

How to avoid it

To avoid falling prey to the illusion of familiarity, we must occasionally force ourselves to engage in cognitive strain—to think things through again, redefine our understanding, and critique our assumptions. While our brains naturally seek the path of least resistance, conscious awareness of these tendencies allows us to better navigate the landscape of modern decision-making. By understanding these mental dials, we can better calibrate our responses to new information, making more conscious choices about when to trust our intuitive reactions and when to engage in deeper analysis.

Check out my other works:

Evolution of AI: The Future is Near
Why We Aren’t What We do: Truth Behind Human Behavior
December 17, 2024 3 comments
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PhilosophyPsychologySociology

Antifragility: Using Volatility To Be Stronger

by Charles E. July 5, 2024

In a world characterized by constant change and unpredictability, it is necessary to have a mindset that enables not only survival but growth in the face of adversity: an antifragile mindset. Unlike resilience, which merely withstands shocks and remains the same, or robustness, which acquires errors to strategize against the unknown, antifragility goes a step further, harnessing the disorder and chaos to become stronger and more adaptable. Imagine a version of yourself where every challenge becomes a stepping stone to greater strength, every disruption a catalyst for innovation. This is the essence of antifragility – a revolutionary approach to life, business, and personal growth that transforms volatility into opportunity. In this article, we delve into the principles and philosophy of antifragility the way Nassim Taleb, author and mathematical statistician defines it. We will explore how embracing uncertainty can lead to unprecedented success and resilience in an ever-changing landscape.

Nassim Taleb states:

Some things benefit from shocks, they thrive and grow when exposed to volatility, randomness, disorder, and stressors and love adventure, risk, and uncertainty.

Shane Parrish. “A Definition of Antifragile and its Implications.” Farnam Street,

Our human immune system is a system that just does that, a system that must go through perturbations to improve and adequately fight against diseases. Similarly our human muscle system shares the same similarity; through muscle breakdown it grows back bigger an stronger. Your immune system and muscle are antifragile systems. The point I am making in this article is that mindset should be no different. Through struggle and stressors our mindset should respond the same way our immune system and muscles do!

Antifragility theory advocates that one should not try to deprive themselves of disorder and the unknown, in doing so with time you will loose the ability respond positively and competently from the unexpected and the unfortunate. The antifragile loves randomness and uncertainty, they can act on things without understanding them, without preparation and get stronger through suffering.

Deprivation of Antifragility

What happens when you deprive the antifragile of volatility?

Think about what happens to your immune system when you deprive it of its triggers and perturbations, it will eventually weaken and the person becomes even more vulnerable to disease. This characteristic is shared by all systems classified in this way.

Nassim Taleb believes that we are being deprived of randomness:

We have been fragilizing the economy, our health, political life, education, almost everything … by suppressing randomness and volatility. … stressors.

Shane Parrish. “A Definition of Antifragile and its Implications.” Farnam Street,

Humans are designed to be antifragile, however, as a society we have moved in a direction that relies on deliberation , methodology, and overall aversion to volatility. We have moved away from our initial design and it is time we re-embrace the randomness and become antifragile

The Black Swan

Nissan Taleb introduces the Black Swan Theory which he defines as the combination of three characteristics. First, is an unpredictable outlier that is outside the realm of regular expectations. Secondly these events typically carry an significant impact. Lastly, in spite of its outlier context, the human brain makes an attempt to explain the occurrence retrospectively as if it was explainable and predictable. To further extrapolate, it is essentially our minds attempt to create order from disorder. Our brain will present us with the illusion of predictability, a type of bias similar to our hindsight bias, that permits us to believe an event was more predictable than it actually is. In reality, many of these Black Swan events are rarely ever truly predictable, yet we tend to believe it so. In the face of volatility, our thirst for order takes over.

Black Swans hijack our brains, making us feel we “sort of” or “almost” predicted them, because they are retrospectively explainable. We don’t realize the role of these Swans in life because of this illusion of predictability. Life is more, a lot more, labyrinthine than shown in our memory— our minds are in the business of turning history into something smooth and linear, which makes us underestimate randomness

Shane Parrish. “A Definition of Antifragile and its Implications.”

Complex events typically contain many interdependencies that makes it almost impossible to calculate and predict these rare events. We are more prone to these Black Swan events than we realize. Our minds are not well adverse in calculating risk and predicting outlier events but we are very good at underestimating the role randomness plays.

Applying Antifragility

  1. Embrace Change: View volatility and disorder as opportunities for growth.
  2. Take Small Risks: Regularly expose yourself to manageable risks to build resilience.
  3. Learn from Failures: Treat setbacks as learning experiences.
  4. Diversify: Spread out your interests, investments, and skills to reduce dependence on any single source.
  5. Adaptability: Stay flexible and open to new information and strategies.
  6. Strengthen Core Values: Develop strong principles that guide you through challenges.

Check out my other works:

Why We Aren’t What We do: Truth Behind Human Behavior
Evolution of AI: The Future is Near
July 5, 2024 3 comments
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PhilosophyPsychologyScience

Why We Aren’t What We do: Truth Behind Human Behavior

by Charles E. May 16, 2024

The human mind often underestimates the power of situational influences on behavior. Princeton philosopher Gilbert Harman argues that the famous Milgram Experiment exposes a fundamental error in our thinking—we wrongly attribute actions to inherent character traits rather than situational pressures, also known as the fundamental attribution error. This article will shift your understanding of how our cognitive tendencies shapes our perceptions and will highlight a complex web of factors that shape our actions.

First lets get into a little history and science:


The Milgram Experiment

The groundbreaking Milgram experiment, conducted by psychologist Stanley Milgram in the 1960s, investigated obedience to authority. Stanley Milgram believed that certain character traits would dictate behavior in the face of authority. The assumption was that individuals with stronger moral character, integrity, and empathy would resist orders to inflict harm on others. During the experiment, participants were led to believe that they were assisting in an completely unrelated experiment, in which they had to administer electric shocks to a “learner”. These sham or fake electric shocks gradually increased to levels that would have been fatal had they been real.

The study revealed the extent to which people are willing to follow authority figure even when it involves harming others. Unexpectedly all of the subjects fully obeyed the instructions of going up to 300 volts and 65% going up to the full 450 volts (fatal electric shocks).

Various conclusions came about from this work but Gilbert Harman was part of the early few that have addressed it pertaining to our social views of character traits

You are probably now wondering what this has to do with character traits. It is great you ask I will get into that now

Gilbert Harman cites the Milgram experiment in his published work: The Nonexistence of Character Traits

”The Milgram Experiment does not by itself challenge the assumption that subjects of the experiment have robust character traits, it does illustrate the tendency of observers to infer wrongly that actions are due to distinctive robust character traits rather than to aspects of the situation. In other words, it illustrates the way in which observers are subject to a fundamental attribution error”

(Harman, 2004)

The experiment highlights a tendency for observers (people who are judging others’ actions) to make incorrect inferences. Specifically, observers are prone to attribute a person’s actions to their character traits rather than considering the situational factors that might be influencing their behavior.

Fundamental Attribution Error: This is the tendency to overemphasize personal characteristics and ignore situational factors when judging others’ behavior. For instance, if someone cuts you off in traffic, you might think they are a bad driver or an aggressive person, ignoring the possibility that they might be rushing to an emergency. This bias can lead to misunderstanding and miscommunication, as it doesn’t take into account external factors that influence behavior.

Harman is arguing that the Milgram Experiment illustrates this fundamental attribution error. Observers might wrongly conclude that participants’ willingness to administer shocks was due to their personal characteristics (e.g., they are cruel or obedient) rather than understanding that the situational pressure (the authority of the experimenter) played a crucial role in this occurrence. This supports the idea that a person acting compassionately or viciously can be induced by the addition of external pressure and does not support the notion that these are dispositional causes.

Harman suggests that the focus on dispositional factors causes people to significantly undermine the role that situational factors plays in a persons behaviors.

Distributive Causality

Dr. Robert Sapolsky Stanford Neuroscientist introduces the concept of Distributive Causality, emphasizing that our actions are influenced by a vast network of factors over time. This means that our behavior cannot be traced back to a single cause, but rather to a complex web of influences.

Dr. Sapolsky highlights the example of a person’s behavior being shaped by their neuron activity, hormone levels, past experiences, cultural background, and even evolutionary history, which all ultimately play a part in someone’s day to day decision-making.

Another interesting example Dr. Sapolsky introduced is how low blood glucose affects the frontal cortex in a manner that increases impulsivity. This illustrates just how much external factors goes into someone’s actions. As an observer it is implausible to consider all of these external factors when understanding someone’s behavior. Distributed causality involves considering numerous subtle influences that contribute to our actions, making it challenging to pinpoint a single cause.

As opposed to concentrated causality, understanding distributive causality should change how we view blame and punishment. Dr. Sapolsky advocates for a more compassionate approach, focusing on understanding and mitigating the root causes of harmful behavior rather than simple punitive measures.

What Next?

Understanding that our behavior is influenced by a complex web of factors can lead to meaningful changes in our personal interactions and social relationships. Here are some key areas where this insight can be applied:

  1. Empathy and Compassion: Recognizing the situational factors affecting others’ behavior can help us respond with empathy rather than judgment. This shift can improve our relationships and foster a more supportive community.
  2. Conflict Resolution: In personal disputes, considering the external pressures on each person can lead to more effective and compassionate solutions. Understanding the root causes of behavior helps in addressing the underlying issues rather than just the symptoms.
  3. Support Networks: We can create stronger support networks by acknowledging the various factors that influence our friends’ and family members’ actions. Offering help that addresses these diverse influences can lead to more meaningful support.
  4. Effective Communication: By understanding that people’s behavior is shaped by a multitude of factors, we can communicate more effectively. This means listening actively and considering the context behind someone’s actions or words, leading to better mutual understanding.
  5. Personal Growth: Reflecting on how situational factors influence our own behavior can lead to personal growth. By recognizing these influences, we can make more informed decisions and develop healthier habits.

By applying these insights to our everyday interactions, we can build a more understanding and compassionate society. This perspective shift from judging character traits to understanding situational influences can transform how we relate to and support each other.

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May 16, 2024 0 comment
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AllegoriesPhilosophy

Merchant Meets a Wise Wolf

by Charles E. April 26, 2024

Introduction

In the heart of a medieval marketplace, where merchants shout over one another and the scent of spices fills the air, Elias arranges his silks and silver with practiced hands. His stall is a canvas of commerce, a testament to years spent mastering the art of trade. Yet, despite his success, a shadow of longing whispers through his heart, a desire for something just beyond the grasp of profit.



As the day wanes and shadows stretch, the crowd parts, revealing a figure as out of place as a star at noon. A wolf, regal and enigmatic, her eyes holding the quiet storms of centuries. She calls herself Holo, a deity cloaked in fur, ancient as the earth itself. Intrigued by her presence, Elias engages her, her voice a melody that speaks of forgotten worlds.

Under Holo’s gaze, Elias finds his commerce questioned, not through condemnation but through curiosity. Holo asks of value, not as a number but as a concept, her words weaving through the layers of Elias’s understanding.

“What worth lies in these goods beyond their gold?” Holo inquires, her voice a gentle prod in the quiet of a market slowing down. Elias begins with confidence, citing market demands and rare sources, but Holo’s questions peel back these layers, revealing the skeleton of assumption beneath.

As the dialogue deepens, Holo’s questions drift to the essence of Elias’s desires. “What drives your pursuit of wealth?” she probes. Each answer Elias provides is met with a deeper, more introspective question, forcing him to confront the nature of his ambition.

This conversation, subtle yet profound, stirs the waters of Elias’s mind. He reflects on his relentless pursuit of wealth and status, recognizing the silent sacrifices made upon the altar of commerce—wisdom unheeded, truths unexplored.

Night falls, and the marketplace empties, leaving Elias alone with his thoughts and the fading echo of Holo’s words. He stands amid his wares, the riches of a life’s labor, and ponders the cost of their acquisition.



Epilogue

In the stillness that follows, the lesson remains, silent yet powerful, posing a question that echoes into the evening: Is it not more disgraceful to accumulate wealth without wisdom than to modestly seek the truth? Above, the stars twinkle, detached witnesses to human struggles below.

This allegory, intertwined with the essence of “Spice and Wolf” and deep philosophical thought, encourages the reader to reflect with Elias. It questions the high regard often held for wealth and honor, suggesting instead a quieter, more persistent quest for wisdom and truth. It serves as a reflective surface for the reader’s own thoughts and values.



The characters and setting of this allegory is inspired by the Japanese light novel series “Spice and Wolf” written by Isuna Hasekura that has been adapted into an anime. The lessons from this allegory was inspired from Philosophical lessons in the book: Plato’s Five Dialogues



Check out my other works:

Mental Models: Think Like a Genius

Evolution of AI: The Future is Near

April 26, 2024 3 comments
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Mental Model
Psychology

Mental Models: Think Like a Genius

by Charles E. April 9, 2024

Welcome to the intriguing world of mental models! Imagine them as your brain’s Swiss Army knife, a versatile tool that can help you navigate through life’s complexities with ease. In this article, we’ll embark on a informative journey to explore these cognitive superheroes and uncover how they can revolutionize your decision-making and problem-solving skills.

What Are Mental Models?

Mental models are like mental shortcuts or frameworks that help you understand the world around you. They’re the lenses through which you view reality, influencing how you interpret information, make decisions, and solve problems. Think of them as your brain’s internal operating system, constantly running in the background to help you navigate life’s challenges.

Why Are Mental Models Important?

Imagine trying to assemble a jigsaw puzzle without the picture on the box. That’s what it’s like navigating life without mental models. They provide a clear picture, helping you make sense of complex information and make better decisions. By expanding your mental toolkit, you can improve your thinking, reduce errors, and approach problems from different angles.

Popular Mental Models in Decision-Making

The Pareto Principle (80/20 Rule)

Ever noticed how 80% of your wardrobe is worn only 20% of the time? That’s the Pareto Principle in action. It suggests that a small number of causes often lead to a large majority of effects. By focusing on the critical 20%, you can maximize efficiency and results in various aspects of life, from time management to business strategy.

Occam’s Razor

This mental model advocates for simplicity, stating that the simplest explanation is often the correct one. When faced with multiple hypotheses, Occam’s Razor helps you cut through the complexity and choose the one with the fewest assumptions. It’s like choosing between assembling IKEA furniture with or without the manual – simpler is usually better.

The Eisenhower Matrix

Named after President Dwight D. Eisenhower, this matrix helps you prioritize tasks based on urgency and importance. It’s a powerful tool for time management, allowing you to distinguish between what’s truly important and what can wait. Imagine it as your personal assistant, helping you decide which fires to put out first.

Mental Models in Problem Solving

First Principles Thinking

This approach involves breaking down complex problems into their most basic elements and building up from there. It’s like solving a Rubik’s Cube by starting with one side before tackling the rest. First Principles Thinking encourages you to question assumptions and create innovative solutions from the ground up.

Inversion

Instead of focusing on what you want to achieve, inversion encourages you to consider what you want to avoid. It’s like planning a picnic and thinking about how to not get rained on, rather than just hoping for sunshine. This mental model helps you identify potential obstacles and develop strategies to prevent them.

Hanlon’s Razor

This principle suggests that you should never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by incompetence. In other words, don’t assume people are out to get you when they might just be making a mistake. It’s a reminder to give others the benefit of the doubt and avoid jumping to negative conclusions.

Applying Mental Models in Everyday Life

How to Build a Mental Model Toolkit

Think of building your mental model toolkit like collecting LEGO bricks. Start with a few basic pieces (models) and gradually add more to create complex structures (solutions). Read widely, learn from different disciplines, and practice applying models in various situations to enhance your cognitive toolkit.

Using Mental Models in Personal Finance

Mental models like the Sunk Cost Fallacy and Opportunity Cost can be game-changers in managing your finances. They help you make rational decisions about spending, investing, and saving, ensuring that you’re not throwing good money after bad or missing out on

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April 9, 2024 3 comments
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