The Eight Common Errors in The Human Thinking Process: Carl Pacifico
The Eight Common Errors in The Human Thinking Process: Carl Pacifico
Carl Pacifico
Introduction 3
On Being Correct 8
Incomplete Information 10
Similarity 12
Measurements 14
Measuring Intangibles 16
Obsolescence 18
1. Your brain uncritically accepts the first information it gets in any new
subject area as correct, whether it is or not.
4. Your brain considers every item that is compatible with the majority of its
information in a given subject area to be correct and every item that is
contradictory to its information to be incorrect. As a result, the brain has no
internal way to know which items of its information are correct
representations of the real world and which are not.
5. Your brain has no way to know whether or not it has all the information
required to respond appropriately to a given stimulus.
8. Your brain continues to interpret the external world as it was when the last
sensory signal about a given subject area was received. As a result, the
brain is not aware that some of its formerly correct information is now
incorrect.
Carl Pacifico
January 23, 2004
When your senses detect a set of stimuli, your brain assembles all the
information it has about the source of those stimuli and how to deal with them. It
processes all this information to arrive at the response that is most likely to
promote your survival. As the only information in a virgin subject area is the new
information itself, your brain responds as though this new information is correct.
An Incorrect item of information in a virgin subject area not only causes an
incorrect response at that time, but it also tends to block acceptance of correct
information encountered later.
It would be desirable to check the validity of all new items, but this isn’t
possible. Nevertheless, you can:
The previous segment showed why the first information you detect in a
novel subject area is uncritically accepted as being correct. How does this affect
information you receive later in the same subject area?
Subsequent items that are compatible with this first information are also
accepted uncritically as correct. The detection of similar items reinforces and
broadens your information in that subject area.
The way your brain handles contradictory items in this subject area is
quite different. It automatically rejects contradictory information, whether the new
item is correct or incorrect. This is not due to stupidity, stubbornness, or a
character flaw. Unless you consciously consider the validity of the new item, your
brain will automatically reject it as being incorrect.
When you detect any stimulus, all the information associated with it in your
brain is assembled and processed to arrive at an appropriate response. When
little prior information is present, the new item becomes a substantial percentage
of the total and so influences the response. The more information you already
have about that subject, the less effect any contradictory new item has on your
response. At some point, a contradictory new item makes a very small change in
the information already present in your brain. In effect, the contradictory new item
is rejected as incorrect, whether it is or not.
As your brain accepts only compatible items and rejects all contradictory
items, your experiences seem to confirm your conclusions, whether they are
correct or not. This makes it is very difficult to identify and replace incorrect
information. Some ways to reduce this shortcoming of the thinking mechanism
will be described in a later segment.
When you detect a stimulus through any of your senses, your brain
immediately assembles and processes all the information it contains about the
stimulus and how to deal with it. When your information is correct, your response
achieves your objective, obtaining a benefit or fleeing from a threat. When your
information is incorrect, you respond inappropriately, sometimes fatally so.
In short, the brain’s criterion for the correctness of a new item is simply its
compatibility with the information already present in that subject area, whether
this new information is right or wrong.
Even when you suspect that some of your information might be incorrect,
you have no internal mechanism to identify which items are correct and which
are not.
You obviously can’t check each item of your information for its validity. So,
with the exception of familiar items, consider all your information to be
“unproved.” As a result, the new items encountered are no longer contradictory to
your present unproved information and so can be accepted into the brain and
included in the process of arriving at a response to the stimuli you detect.
\When a person cannot deny an error, he or she often offers the defense
of, "I didn't know..." I didn't know the report was due today. I didn’t know he used
drugs. I didn't know the gun was loaded.
This introduces the source of another major error in the human thinking
process. The brain has no way to know when its information about a stimulus is
incomplete. In fact, it is only from experience in other situations that you can
suspect that there might be more to this subject than you now know and even
then there is no mechanism to identify just what information is missing. In short,
except in specific situations, you have no way to know what you don’t know.
Although your brain arrives at the best response for the information it has,
this is often quite different from the response it would make if its information were
complete. Responses based on incomplete information are always less than the
best and sometimes are fatal.
Do all Asians, all soldiers, or all leopards look alike to you? Does all rock
music sound the same?
Unless you already have information to the contrary, your brain interprets
similar items as being identical. This shortcoming of your thinking equipment
evolved because it had survival value for our ancestral creatures. It was more
important for them to respond instantly to a stimulus than to distinguish one fish
or one bear from another.
On the other hand, similarity causes some serious errors. Most people
consider items that are similar in some ways to be similar in all ways. For
example, based on similar physical form, they group koalas with bears and
expect all boys named Percy to behave in the same way. The most ridiculous
example is "Men (or women) are all alike!"
It seems that our ancient ancestors did not need to measure anything
because the human brain never developed any mechanism to do so directly.
However, if two or more similar objects are detected simultaneously, the brain
can determine that one is longer, thicker, brighter, etc. than the others. So all
measurements are made through comparisons. However, the comparison must
be made correctly for the measurement to be valid.
Let’s say you want to measure the length of a metal cylinder. The object to
be measured must first be identified completely and correctly. Otherwise you
might think you were measuring the potency of a drug when you are actually
measuring the effect of an impurity.
You need something to compare the cylinder to. This something must be
identical in every respect with the object except for the one property being
measured; any other differences might distort the comparison. For example, if
the second cylinder were made of a different metal, a measurement made at one
temperature would be incorrect at every other temperature. This second object
becomes the "standard" for the comparison.
Now you need some means of comparing these objects. You place the
objects side by side and note any difference detected by your senses. Even if
mechanical devices are used to aid in this task, direct sensory perception by a
person always occurs somewhere in this process.
You see that the cylinder is some multiple of the standard that has been
selected as the unit for length. You've "measured" it. Other arbitrary standards
can be selected for weight, speed, and every other physical property of objects
you want to measure.
The process to this point is satisfactory for measuring the length of a stick,
but now you want to measure how fast grass will grow to a height of 3 inches
from some new seeds. You use the present seeds as the standard for the
comparison. The grass from the new seed reaches the target height in half the
time. Wonderful, but would you accept this measurement if one seed was grown
in loam and the other in clay? Of if one seed received more water than the other?
Since you can't eliminate all the other factors in this system, you'll make
them identical. You'll use the same soil, the same amount of water, sunlight, etc.
for both seeds. Will the measurement be correct now? Yes, but.... Yes, it will be
correct but only for that specific set of conditions and no other. In a different soil,
at a different moisture level, with some other degree of sunshine, etc., etc., the
measurement will no longer be correct. So it is essential to specify the conditions
for a measurement. A common error is considering a measurement that is
correct under one set of conditions to be correct under some other set of
conditions.
As you have no way to know which items in your brain have become
obsolete, you can’t correct them all. However, you can be alert for three principal
sources of obsolescence. A common type of obsolescence occurs with items that
change frequently or erratically, such as prices and styles. More difficult to detect
are items that change slowly and steadily, as with human aging. Finally, the more
time that has elapsed since you received information in a given subject area, the
more likely it is that your information about it has become obsolete.