The claim is not observable in any way and offers no testable predictions or anything that even remotely sounds like advice. It’s unprovable because it doesn’t talk about objective reality.
Which claim? As for the claim that one’s intuition is evidence, I predict that in worlds where someone with a good track record has an intuitive belief, the belief will be true more than it will be false.
Fair point. I agree that “I have a gut feeling about something non-observable” is a possibility. But so is “I have a gut feeling about something that is observable”.
And the only way to distinguish is to find an observation you can make. Crockford’s model offers none I can recognize, not even “System I coordinates your muscles to move your mouse”.
The claim is not observable in any way and offers no testable predictions or anything that even remotely sounds like advice. It’s unprovable because it doesn’t talk about objective reality.
There’s a sequence about how the scientific method is less powerful than Bayesian reasoning that you should probably read.
I think the point is, how would we tell the difference between worlds in which programming does and does not require System 1?
Which claim? As for the claim that one’s intuition is evidence, I predict that in worlds where someone with a good track record has an intuitive belief, the belief will be true more than it will be false.
I predict that if the Pope declares Jesus is God, there will be more worlds in which Jesus is God than worlds in which Jesus is merely the son of God.
If a statement does not say anything about observable reality, there is no objective truth to be determined.
Fair point. I agree that “I have a gut feeling about something non-observable” is a possibility. But so is “I have a gut feeling about something that is observable”.
And the only way to distinguish is to find an observation you can make. Crockford’s model offers none I can recognize, not even “System I coordinates your muscles to move your mouse”.