Might belief in belief occasionally be valuable when overcoming bias? It would be better to correct my beliefs, but sometimes those beliefs come from bias. I might be convinced in my head that standing on the glass floor of an airplane and looking down is totally safe—this specially-modified-for-cool-views airplane has flown hundreds of flights—yet in my heart deeply believe that if I step onto it I will fall through. I might then choose to “believe in the belief that it is safe to take a step”, while all my instinctual reactions are based on a false model. The cognitive dissonance is due to my inability to integrate something so foreign to the evolutionary environment into my belief structure.
Might belief in belief occasionally be valuable when overcoming bias? It would be better to correct my beliefs, but sometimes those beliefs come from bias. I might be convinced in my head that standing on the glass floor of an airplane and looking down is totally safe—this specially-modified-for-cool-views airplane has flown hundreds of flights—yet in my heart deeply believe that if I step onto it I will fall through. I might then choose to “believe in the belief that it is safe to take a step”, while all my instinctual reactions are based on a false model. The cognitive dissonance is due to my inability to integrate something so foreign to the evolutionary environment into my belief structure.
See The Mystery of the Haunted Rationalist.