The 2 thinking systems of your brain
The brain is a complex and wonderful machine which is the result of thousand years of evolution .
Generations after generations it became more and more efficient . Today i'm gonna talk about the two systems which coexist in your thinking process .
First of all i want you to do a small experience . It is a selective attention test .
You'll have to count the number of pass of the white team . Try to do it seriously .
Here is the link :
Interesting no ?!
Those two systems i want to talk about can be called system 1 and system 2 .
System 1 :
To understand this first system , look at this picture :
What you feel when looking at this picture is combining seeing and intuitive thinking . As soon as you saw this picture you knew that this guy was angry . If he would arrive in the room and walk in your direction with this face you would surely be ready to protect yourself . You look at this picture and you can anticipate the fact that this guy won't arrive and bring something really positive and that you should be careful . You've just experienced fast thinking .
System 2 :
now look at this : 23 x 14
Here we have a different situation . You immediately knew that this was a multiplication problem and it is highly probable that you didn't solve it as fast as you understood that the first guy was angry . You also have a vague intuition of what the result can be . You know that the result won't be 17 nor 54987362000 . instantly you look at the problem and you understand that you have to solve it , that you will have to think to solve it , and you have a certain idea of what the result could be ( or could not be ) . You've just experienced slow thinking as you proceeded through a sequence of steps .
System 1 can be defined as an automatic system effortlessly originating impressions and feelings that are the main sources if the explicit beliefs and deliberate choices of system 2 .
Here are somes examples of the automatic activities that are attributed to system 1 :
- Detect that one object is more distant that another
- orient of the source of a sudden sound
- complete the phrase " bread and ... "
- understand simple sentences
- recognizing somebody's feeling
All those thinking process are automatics and fast .
The system 2's operations require attention and are disrupted when attention is drawn away .
Here are some examples of the automatic activities that are attributed to system 2 :
- Look for a man with white hair
- Focus on the voice of a particular person in a crowded and noisy room
- Count the occurences of the letter b in a page of text
- Multiply 35 by 587
To sum up this article :
2 thinking systems coexist in your brain . The first one is automatic and you don't even realize that you use it . The second one ask more attention and you realize that you are using it . What you've experienced on the first test is the fact that when you use the system 2 ( which asks more attention to your brain ) your system 1 is less efficient . That's something that magicians know , they turn off your system 1 by forcing you to use the system 2 .
System 1 is the system that allows you to think without realising you think . The system 2 is the system in which you are thinking and are aware of the fact you are thinking .
I like that fascinating topic too! Your presentation of that quite complicated subject was interesting, direct to the point and funny as well with that Gorilla game and pics.
I think you might enjoy that TED demonstration: https://www.ted.com/talks/marco_tempest_a_cyber_magic_card_trick_like_no_other
i like where you are going with this, but only two?
the human brain is the embodiment of the term, cruft. layer after layer added on over millions of years of evolution.
that doesn't even include interaction with our environment. which includes, but is not limited to, chemicals, natural and artificial, in our air water and food, variations in light and other parts of the em spectrum affecting our cycles, parasites and symbiotes from microbes on up chemically making us do things of which we often are not even aware. thinking is hugely complex and so substantially affected by external factors that sometimes i wonder if it is wise to believe we can separate the internal thinker from externalities we think about. i don't want to forget about thinking about thinking. when trying to take into account external factors in thinking about our thoughts the whole thing becomes so complex that i don't quite know where to go from there. i do think we have to start somewhere and i applaud the crack you're taking at it. keep going. the benefits we reap from self reflection and examination can only improve us. thanks for the inspiration.