The guessing trick

It seems that we are prone to a particular simplification in analyzing the behavior of others and of ourselves. When someone does something differently than we would, our immediate explanation is of the ‘stupid – lazy – or - evil’ type. When we are confronted by having done something differently than others would have, our immediate explanation is almost never ‘stupid – lazy – or - evil’ and often the exact opposite – we thought long a hard about it. Now, most of us know that we are not smarter, more conscientious, and more moral than absolutely everyone else we meet. Either we are deluding ourselves or underestimating others or both on a fairly regular basis.

I remember first thinking about this years ago when I read someone talking about anthropology and how it is a good idea to assume that everyone does what they do for perfectly rational reasons. If you don’t make that assumption, you are not going to be able to understand strange cultures. I was really blown away by that thought. And I used it. When someone surprised me with their actions, I just assumed they had a good reason but I usually didn’t think about what the reason might be unless I was very curious. What started to happen was that a third person would be somewhat exasperated by the strange behaviour and say, “Why did they do that?” Quite often a plausible reason would jump into my head and I would supply it. “Oh, they probably did it because of x.” The whole thing would be a little magical.

Then I learned that in experiments with split-brained subjects, the speaking left hemisphere would make up reasons for the (to it) strange behaviour of the non-speaking right hemisphere. The left hemisphere appeared to be unaware that it was guessing the motivation of the right. I also learned that people doing inappropriate things under hypnotic suggestion would give plausible explanations when asked why they had done those things. This seemed essentially the same trick as my ‘everyone is rational’ one.

There also is a trickle of evidence that our knowledge of our own motivation can be faulty and that we are pretty good at fabricating justification when necessary.

So now comes the realization that we treat ourselves like I have learned to treat others. We just assumed that we are rational (and not stupid-lazy-evil) and then went a motivation is needed, we guess. And given that we are pretty good at this guessing, we are usually right enough. It is when this mechanism is used in unusual circumstances (like hypnosis) or applied to another’s mind, that we can see that it is just a mechanism for making guesses. Nice trick!

3 thoughts on “The guessing trick

  1. I have always been puzzled about why is it that it is very likely that the brain first takes the decition about somethig by guessing, and then justifies it rationaly. the brain cheat us in not letting us this, it makes us think we infered to decide. Now it seems the same kind of mechanism happens with us while judging other people, Maybe this guess mechanisms (may be related to intuition), are indeed the main and principal decision takers and judgers we have, probably they are use more than half of the time and the rest might be done by a more rational method.

    JanetK: Thanks Mariana. Maybe we put guessed motivations on our actions because we need a useful narrative in our memories.

  2. I don’t think the decision is made by “guessing”, but rather by a non-algorithmic process (which can be opaque to algorithmic analysis). I think that is what intuition is, a non-algorithmic process, for example estimating a quantity instead of counting. The counting algorithm is much more accurate, but takes much longer.

    JanetK: Thanks daedalus2u. I agree that guessing may be a word with a lot of baggage. What I mean is something very much like you describe. The thing I was trying to get across is that I have no direct knowledge of my motivation but my intuition of what motivates me is pretty good. I certainly agree about the importance of non-algorithmic processes.

  3. I think that the brain works this way because using algorithms to decide things is too slow. You can’t wait for an algorithm to give you an answer while you are running from a bear, so the default has to be non-algorithmic and quick.

    After you have made your decision and implemented it, then in hindsight you can look back on it and see if it was a good decision or not, and modify the non-algorithmic decision generating process accordingly (or not).

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