Re: Understanding Psychology and Cognition
What I mean by "people aren't logical" is not that the things they think, say, or do are not consistent with their own ideas, beliefs, and values, or that they don't have a particular methodology of arriving at these things. I meant that they are not perfectly rational, in terms of pure formal logic.
Computers are perfectly logical (in a sense), so we can consistently write programs that will do exactly what we want them to. Basically, we can "teach" them whatever we want as long as we know how to do it. Humans on the other hand are not perfectly logical. If we want to teach a particular concept to a person, there could be many rational ways of doing so, but it's possible that none of them work for a particular individual, and more abstract (even "incorrect", paradoxically) approaches work better.
What I mean by "people aren't logical" is not that the things they think, say, or do are not consistent with their own ideas, beliefs, and values, or that they don't have a particular methodology of arriving at these things. I meant that they are not perfectly rational, in terms of pure formal logic.
Computers are perfectly logical (in a sense), so we can consistently write programs that will do exactly what we want them to. Basically, we can "teach" them whatever we want as long as we know how to do it. Humans on the other hand are not perfectly logical. If we want to teach a particular concept to a person, there could be many rational ways of doing so, but it's possible that none of them work for a particular individual, and more abstract (even "incorrect", paradoxically) approaches work better.

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