26 January 2014 @ 03:33 am
we made no sense, no sense  
Experiments have shown that six-month-old infants see the sequence of events as a cause-effect scenario, and they indicate surprise when the sequence is altered. We are evidently ready from birth to have impressions of causality, which do not depend on reasoning about patterns of causation. (..) We are pattern seekers, believers in a coherent world, in which regularities appear not by accident but as a result of mechanical causality or of someone’s intention. We do not expect to see regularity produced by a random process, and when we detect what appears to be a rule, we quickly reject the idea that the process is truly random. Random processes produce many sequences that convince people that the process is not random after all. You can see why assuming causality could have had evolutionary advantages. It is part of the general vigilance that we have inherited from ancestors. We are automatically on the lookout for the possibility that the environment has changed.
(..)
Our comforting conviction that the world makes sense rests on a secure foundation: our almost unlimited ability to ignore our ignorance. (..) The core of the illusion is that we believe we understand the past, which implies that the future also should be knowable, but in fact we understand the past less than we believe we do. These illusions are comforting. They reduce the anxiety that we would experience if we allowed ourselves to fully acknowledge the uncertainties of existence. We all have a need for the reassuring message that actions have appropriate consequences, and that success will reward wisdom and courage.

//Daniel Kahneman, 2011, Thinking, Fast and Slow
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pelnufeja[info]pelnufeja on January 26th, 2014 - 02:13 pm
Liekas, varētu būt forša grāmata.
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cukursēne[info]saccharomyces on January 26th, 2014 - 02:53 pm
riktīgi forša, jā!
varu atsūtīt Tev, ja gribi (:
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pelnufeja[info]pelnufeja on January 26th, 2014 - 03:54 pm
jā, būtu forši. :)
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