The Powers of Intuition 

Ψ  Intuition: The ability to sense or know immediately without reasoning.     

Ψ  Intuition (knowledge): understanding without apparent effort, quick & ready insight seemingly independent 
of previous experiences or empirical knowledge.    

Ψ  For a really insightful look at the the significance of intuition in relation to decision making I recommend that you 
read Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking a 2005 book by Malcolm Gladwell. which popularizes research 
from psychology & behavioral economics on the adaptive unconscious; mental processes that work rapidly & 
automatically from relatively little information. It considers both the strengths of the adaptive unconscious, for 
example in expert judgment, & its pitfalls such as stereotypes. Gladwell proposes that "Thin-slicing" ( our ability to 
gauge what is really important from a very narrow period of experience ) is often as good as or even better than 
carefully planned & considered decision making processes.
    
Ψ  In psychology Intuition is one of the four axes of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, opposite "Sensing". The 
"SN" preference refers to how we gather information. We all need data on which to base our decisions. We gather 
data through our five senses. Jung contended that there are 2 distinct ways of perceiving the data that we gather. 
The "Sensing" preference absorbs data in a literal, concrete fashion. The "Intuitive" preference generates abstract 
possibilities from information that is gathered. We all use both Sensing & Intuition in our lives, but to different degrees 
of effectiveness & with different levels of comfort.     
 
Ψ  Intuition: automatic thinking.
 
                                Examples of Automatic Thinking (intuition): 
 
 Ψ  A Schema is a template of what we are like & is a model for how we understand the social world 
 around us. A schema becomes a pattern imposed on complex experiences to simplify, organize or guide our 
 response.     
 
 Ψ  Emotional reactions are often nearly instantaneous, i.e. made without thinking.     
 
 Ψ  With enough expertise, you may intuitively know the answer to a problem.     
 
 Ψ  Some things such as skills & conditioned dispositions we remember implicitly, we don't have to 
 think about them to use (do) them.
 
Consider:
 
Ψ The term blindsight refers to a "medical condition in which the sufferer responds to visual 
stimuli without consciously perceiving them" and is associated with damage to the primary 
visual cortex (V1). These claims can be backed up with experimental data; subjects that for 
all intensive purposes should be blind have retained the extraordinary ability to discriminate 
stimuli without the compliment of a primary visual cortex or awareness that an event has occurred. 
How is this possible? Many psychologists have long hypothesized that most of the stimuli that we 
encounter never reach our conscious awareness. However, it can be seen in blindsight research 
that behavior can be directed by the unconscious processing (intuition) of these stimuli indicating 
that conscious awareness is not a sufficient requirement to behave in the world. While the true 
depths of the unconscious may never be known, blindsight does provide a crude measure of the
unconscious' transfer of perception to behavior.

Ψ Prosopagnosia (sometimes known as face blindness) is a rare disorder of face perception where 
the ability to recognize faces is impaired, although the ability to recognize objects may be relatively 
intact. It usually appears to result from brain injury or neurological illness affecting specific areas of 
the brain, although more recently cases of congenital or developmental prosopagnosia have also 
been reported. People with face blindness react intuitively to pictures of people they know even though 
they cannot recognize them.

                                                      Overconfidence    

Ψ  We can process large amounts of data efficiently & automatically, but our automatic intuitions often err, & usually 
we don't even realize our flaws so we continue to operate in the same ways with optimism. The overconfidence 
phenomenon refers to the human tendency to be more confident in one's behaviors, attributes & physical 
characteristics than one ought to be.     

Ψ  Ironically, incompetence feeds overconfidence. (Kuger & Dunning (1999)     

Ψ  Overconfidence bias may cause people to persist in situations where their expected outcome is poor. In some 
situations, this might cause them to improve their outcomes via greater effort. Nevertheless, this bias can be
counterproductive.     

Ψ  Confirmation bias refers to a type of selective thinking whereby one tends to notice & to look for what confirms 
one's beliefs, & to ignore, not look for, or undervalue the relevance of what contradicts one's beliefs. Confirmation bias 
justifies overconfidence.

Remedies:     

    1.  Get prompt feedback. 
      2.  Consider disconfirming information. (Force yourself.)

                                                                    On Memories  

 Ψ  Memories are not copies of experiences that we retrieve intact, rather they are reconstructions. As 
reconstructions they are subject to our current personal bias & attitudes. We can revise our own histories & do,
making ourselves look better.     
 
 Ψ  People often exhibit rosy retrospection. That is, they recall mildly pleasant events more 
 favorably than they were.
       
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                                                               Social Psychology
                                                                   Robert C. Gates