Once upon a time I tried using what I could coin “quicklists”. I took a receipt, turned it over to the back (clear side), and jotted down 5-10 things that I wanted to believe. Then I set a timer for 24 hours and, before that time elapsed, acted as if I believed those things. My experiment was too successful; by the time 24 hours were up I had ended up in a different county, with little recollection of what I’d been doing, and some policemen asking me pointed questions. (I don’t believe any drugs were involved, just sleep deprivation, but I can’t say for certain).
More recently, I rented and saw the film Memento, which explores these techniques in a fictional setting. The concept of short-term forgetting seemed reasonable and the techniques the character uses to work around it are easily adapted in real life. My initial test involved printing out a pamphlet with some dentistry stuff in tiny type (7 12-pt pages shrunk to fit on front-back of 1 page, folded in quarters), and carrying it with me to my dentist appointment. I was able to discuss most of the things from my pamphlet, and it did seem that the level of conversation was raised, but there were many other variables as well so it’s hard to quantify the exact effect.
I’m not certain these techniques actually count as “doublethink”, since the contradiction is between my “internal” beliefs and the beliefs I wrote down, but it does allow some exploration of the possibilities beyond rationality. I can override my system 2 with a piece of paper, and then system 1 follows.
NB: Retrieving your original beliefs after you’ve been going off of the ones from the paper is left as an exercise to the student
I think a little more elaboration on the quicklists experiment would be appreciated, and in particular a clearer description of what you think transpired when it went “too right”. For me, at least, your experimental outcome might be extremely surprising (depending on the extent of the sleep deprivation involved), but I’m not even sure yet what model I should be re-assessing.
Once upon a time I tried using what I could coin “quicklists”. I took a receipt, turned it over to the back (clear side), and jotted down 5-10 things that I wanted to believe. Then I set a timer for 24 hours and, before that time elapsed, acted as if I believed those things. My experiment was too successful; by the time 24 hours were up I had ended up in a different county, with little recollection of what I’d been doing, and some policemen asking me pointed questions. (I don’t believe any drugs were involved, just sleep deprivation, but I can’t say for certain).
More recently, I rented and saw the film Memento, which explores these techniques in a fictional setting. The concept of short-term forgetting seemed reasonable and the techniques the character uses to work around it are easily adapted in real life. My initial test involved printing out a pamphlet with some dentistry stuff in tiny type (7 12-pt pages shrunk to fit on front-back of 1 page, folded in quarters), and carrying it with me to my dentist appointment. I was able to discuss most of the things from my pamphlet, and it did seem that the level of conversation was raised, but there were many other variables as well so it’s hard to quantify the exact effect.
I’m not certain these techniques actually count as “doublethink”, since the contradiction is between my “internal” beliefs and the beliefs I wrote down, but it does allow some exploration of the possibilities beyond rationality. I can override my system 2 with a piece of paper, and then system 1 follows.
NB: Retrieving your original beliefs after you’ve been going off of the ones from the paper is left as an exercise to the student
I would like to read more about this. Would you consider writing it up?
I thought I had written all I could. What sort of things should I add?
I think a little more elaboration on the quicklists experiment would be appreciated, and in particular a clearer description of what you think transpired when it went “too right”. For me, at least, your experimental outcome might be extremely surprising (depending on the extent of the sleep deprivation involved), but I’m not even sure yet what model I should be re-assessing.