Why substitute an easily answerable question? That seems like the opposite of what you should be doing—you don’t want to prompt your brain to give cached answers, you want it to switch to Type 2 reasoning to compute the answer. This view is further argued in Your inner Google and Cached Thoughts.
Yup. That’s why I don’t like the name that I used in the title—it describes behavior that you should avoid. “Not substituting the question” isn’t catchy enough. Added a sentence in the main post to hopefully clarify.
Why substitute an easily answerable question? That seems like the opposite of what you should be doing—you don’t want to prompt your brain to give cached answers, you want it to switch to Type 2 reasoning to compute the answer. This view is further argued in Your inner Google and Cached Thoughts.
This looks like a description of common behavior, so you can notice when you’re falling into it, and consider switching to Type 2 reasoning.
Yup. That’s why I don’t like the name that I used in the title—it describes behavior that you should avoid. “Not substituting the question” isn’t catchy enough. Added a sentence in the main post to hopefully clarify.
“Know to empty caches” perhaps?