Oh, this is excellent! I do a version of this, but I haven’t paid enough attention to what I do to give it a name. “Blurting” is perfect.
I try to make sure to always notice my immediate reaction to something, so I can more reliably tell what my more sophisticated reasoning modules transforms that reaction into. Almost all the search-process imbalances (eg. filtered recollections, motivated stopping, etc.) come into play during the sophistication, so it’s inherently risky. But refusing to reason past the blurt is equally inadvisable.
This is interesting from a predictive-processing perspective.[1] The first thing I do when I hear someone I respect tell me their opinion, is to compare that statement to my prior mental model of the world. That’s the fast check. If it conflicts, I aspire to mentally blurt out that reaction to myself.
It takes longer to generate an alternative mental model (ie. sophistication) that is able to predict the world described by the other person’s statement, and there’s a lot more room for bias to enter via the mental equivalent of multiple comparisons. Thus, if I’m overly prone to conform, that bias will show itself after I’ve already blurted out “huh!” and made note of my prior. The blurt helps me avoid the failure mode of conforming and feeling like that’s what I believed all along.
Oh, this is excellent! I do a version of this, but I haven’t paid enough attention to what I do to give it a name. “Blurting” is perfect.
I try to make sure to always notice my immediate reaction to something, so I can more reliably tell what my more sophisticated reasoning modules transforms that reaction into. Almost all the search-process imbalances (eg. filtered recollections, motivated stopping, etc.) come into play during the sophistication, so it’s inherently risky. But refusing to reason past the blurt is equally inadvisable.
This is interesting from a predictive-processing perspective.[1] The first thing I do when I hear someone I respect tell me their opinion, is to compare that statement to my prior mental model of the world. That’s the fast check. If it conflicts, I aspire to mentally blurt out that reaction to myself.
It takes longer to generate an alternative mental model (ie. sophistication) that is able to predict the world described by the other person’s statement, and there’s a lot more room for bias to enter via the mental equivalent of multiple comparisons. Thus, if I’m overly prone to conform, that bias will show itself after I’ve already blurted out “huh!” and made note of my prior. The blurt helps me avoid the failure mode of conforming and feeling like that’s what I believed all along.
Blurting is a faster and more usefwl variation on writing down your predictions in advance.
Speculation. I’m not very familiar with predictive processing, but the claim seems plausible to me on alternative models as well.