期刊:Cambridge University Press eBooks [Cambridge University Press] 日期:2002-07-08卷期号:: 379-396被引量:387
标识
DOI:10.1017/cbo9780511808098.024
摘要
The stimulation from a classic paper in the heuristics and biases tradition does not come only from the insights provided into processes of judgment and decision making; it also comes from anxiety, from the tension introduced between immediate intuition and more measured rational belief. Clearly, there is a limit to how much one's interest is piqued by reading about other people's mistakes. It is our own mistakes, and the insights they bring, that are so arresting and compelling. The tension is revealing because it reflects a gap within our own heads between, on one hand, our intuitions and, on the other hand, those of our beliefs that we consider rational. The classic demonstrations often suggest two minds at work: one following the "natural assessment methods" like representativeness and availability; and the other working to form coherent, justifiable sets of beliefs and plans of action. As Tversky and Kahneman have repeatedly shown, the two minds do not always agree.