I recently read a fascinating paper that argued based on what we know about cognitive bias that our capacity for higher reason actually evolved as a means to persuade others of what we already believe, rather than as a means to reach accurate conclusions. In other words, rationalization came first and reason second.
Unfortunately I can’t remember the title or the authors. Does anyone remember this paper? I’d like to refer to it in this talk. Thanks!
I recently read a fascinating paper that argued based on what we know about cognitive bias that our capacity for higher reason actually evolved as a means to persuade others of what we already believe, rather than as a means to reach accurate conclusions. In other words, rationalization came first and reason second.
Unfortunately I can’t remember the title or the authors. Does anyone remember this paper? I’d like to refer to it in this talk. Thanks!
That would probably be “Why do humans reason” by Mercier and Sperber, which I covered in this post.
The very one. Thanks—and wow, that was swift!