I don’t think you quite understood my meaning. I can see why, though, as my post is not very clear. Edited it a little.
I don’t really have anything significant to change my mind about, as I’m reasonably certain that my major beliefs are without error. I just feel a social pressure to change my mind because many of these posts on Changing Your Mind seem to decry having any level of certainty that your beliefs are rational and correct. I feel guilty that I have that certainty, which I think is justified, when I supposedly should not.
Wedrifid’s comment still applies. Examine the social pressure, identify how it produces guilt in your mind, and then change your mind so that it doesn’t produce guilt no more.
Recently I’ve really liked the “brain as cognitive engine” metaphor, so in that vein I offer you a different interpretation of what “change your mind” means: altering your brain. So changing your mind is no longer “I believed X, but now I believe Y” and is more like “My brain used to generate X but I shut off the Z input and removed the Q cogitator and now it generates Y”.
I’ve seen it said here a lot that overconfidence is a problem, but so is underconfidence. If you think your certainty (or more ideally, near-certainty) is justified, and you can explain why with reasons, any social pressure to be less confident you might be perceiving would be misplaced.
I don’t think you quite understood my meaning. I can see why, though, as my post is not very clear. Edited it a little.
I don’t really have anything significant to change my mind about, as I’m reasonably certain that my major beliefs are without error. I just feel a social pressure to change my mind because many of these posts on Changing Your Mind seem to decry having any level of certainty that your beliefs are rational and correct. I feel guilty that I have that certainty, which I think is justified, when I supposedly should not.
Wedrifid’s comment still applies. Examine the social pressure, identify how it produces guilt in your mind, and then change your mind so that it doesn’t produce guilt no more.
Recently I’ve really liked the “brain as cognitive engine” metaphor, so in that vein I offer you a different interpretation of what “change your mind” means: altering your brain. So changing your mind is no longer “I believed X, but now I believe Y” and is more like “My brain used to generate X but I shut off the Z input and removed the Q cogitator and now it generates Y”.
I’ve seen it said here a lot that overconfidence is a problem, but so is underconfidence. If you think your certainty (or more ideally, near-certainty) is justified, and you can explain why with reasons, any social pressure to be less confident you might be perceiving would be misplaced.