Hm, can you think of any examples of cognitive biases that aren’t about beliefs? You mention that the term “cognitive” also has to do with perception. When I hear “perception” I think sight, sound, etc. But biases in things like sight and sound feel to me like they would be called illusions, not biases.
The first one to come to mind was Recency Bias, but maybe I’m just paying that one more attention because it came up recently.
Having noticed that bias in myself, I consulted an external source https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases and checked that rather a lot of them are about preferences, perceptions, reactions, attitudes, attention, and lots of other things that aren’t beliefs.
They do often misinform beliefs, but many of the biases themselves seem to be prior to belief formation or evaluation.
Ah, those examples have made the distinction between biases that misinform beliefs and biases of beliefs clear. Thanks!
As someone who seems to understand the term better than I do, I’m curious whether you share my impression that the term “cognitive” is often misused. As you say, it refers to a pretty broad set of things, and I feel like people use the term “cognitive” when they’re actually trying to point to a much narrower set of things.
Hm, can you think of any examples of cognitive biases that aren’t about beliefs? You mention that the term “cognitive” also has to do with perception. When I hear “perception” I think sight, sound, etc. But biases in things like sight and sound feel to me like they would be called illusions, not biases.
The first one to come to mind was Recency Bias, but maybe I’m just paying that one more attention because it came up recently.
Having noticed that bias in myself, I consulted an external source https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases and checked that rather a lot of them are about preferences, perceptions, reactions, attitudes, attention, and lots of other things that aren’t beliefs.
They do often misinform beliefs, but many of the biases themselves seem to be prior to belief formation or evaluation.
Ah, those examples have made the distinction between biases that misinform beliefs and biases of beliefs clear. Thanks!
As someone who seems to understand the term better than I do, I’m curious whether you share my impression that the term “cognitive” is often misused. As you say, it refers to a pretty broad set of things, and I feel like people use the term “cognitive” when they’re actually trying to point to a much narrower set of things.