The framing effect affects how you might answer a given question. What I’m talking about is figuring out why you’re answering a given question at all instead of some completely different question (rather than a reframing of the given question). A privileged question isn’t necessarily “wrong” in the sense that it might rely on an untrue premise (as in your example), it’s just suboptimal.
The perspective is that the question “What is a good way for me to expend my brain clock-cycles?” doesn’t automatically come to mind and stop people from wasting think-time. The framing effect is about judgement bias introduced by the particular way a question is asked, rather than the possible bias in think-time allocation caused by asking and talking about the wrong questions.
“When did you stop beating your wife?”
This is basically framing effect, no?
The framing effect affects how you might answer a given question. What I’m talking about is figuring out why you’re answering a given question at all instead of some completely different question (rather than a reframing of the given question). A privileged question isn’t necessarily “wrong” in the sense that it might rely on an untrue premise (as in your example), it’s just suboptimal.
The perspective is that the question “What is a good way for me to expend my brain clock-cycles?” doesn’t automatically come to mind and stop people from wasting think-time. The framing effect is about judgement bias introduced by the particular way a question is asked, rather than the possible bias in think-time allocation caused by asking and talking about the wrong questions.