This is pretty much the same for me. I think the solution to bat and ball of “10cents, oh no, that doesn’t work. Split the difference evenly for 5 cents? yup that’s better” is all done on system 1.
Kahneman’s examples of system 1 thinking include (I think) a Chess Grandmaster seeing a good chess move, so he includes the possibility of training your system 1 to be able to do more things. In the case of the OP, system 1 has been trained to really understand exponential growth and ratios. I think that for me both “quickly check that your answer is right” and “try something vaguely sensible and see what happens” are both ingrained as general principles that I don’t have to exert effort to apply them to simple problems.
A problem which I would volunteer for a CRT is the snail climbing out of a well. Here there’s an obvious but wrong answer but I think if you realise that it’s wrong then the correct answer isn’t too hard to figure out.
This is pretty much the same for me. I think the solution to bat and ball of “10cents, oh no, that doesn’t work. Split the difference evenly for 5 cents? yup that’s better” is all done on system 1.
Kahneman’s examples of system 1 thinking include (I think) a Chess Grandmaster seeing a good chess move, so he includes the possibility of training your system 1 to be able to do more things. In the case of the OP, system 1 has been trained to really understand exponential growth and ratios. I think that for me both “quickly check that your answer is right” and “try something vaguely sensible and see what happens” are both ingrained as general principles that I don’t have to exert effort to apply them to simple problems.
A problem which I would volunteer for a CRT is the snail climbing out of a well. Here there’s an obvious but wrong answer but I think if you realise that it’s wrong then the correct answer isn’t too hard to figure out.