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LehHoww 09-06-85 |
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How We Decide Jonah
Lehrer Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt, 2009, ISBN 978-0-618-62011-1 |
We are supposed to be logical, rational thinkers
but we're not. The mind is composed of
a messy network of different areas, many related to emotion. Sometimes feelings or intuition lead us to
predictable mistakes. Good decisions
require both reason and emotion. The
real world is too complex for just one or the other. One can develop a wealth of judgment over
time. This book tries to understand
our behavior from inside the mind, which the author says is "really just
a powerful biological machine." An NFL quarterback has to make several hard
decisions in a few seconds before he is crushed. Every play is a mixture of careful planning
and risky split-second improvisation.
How does he make all the decisions?
It's as if his mind is making decisions without him! The problem with seeing the mind as a computer is
that computers don't have feelings. We
have disparaged the emotional brain.
Our reason and emotion depend on each other. Emotions are a crucial part of the
decision-making process. A brain that
can't feel can't make up its mind. The
orbital frontal cortex integrates emotions into the decisions. It connects feelings to conscious
thought. It assesses alternatives
outside conscious awareness and converts them to emotions and motivation. In a successful soap opera, everything feels sincere, even when it is
outlandish. The director milks the drama. He relies on instinct and 'feel' for the
on-the-fly direction. For direction
and casting he depends on his emotional brain, those twinges of feeling. Consciousness is a small part of what the
brain does: much of what we 'think' is really driven by emotions. "Reason without emotion is
impotent." Intuition can be astonishingly insightful, even
if the origins of the insights are obscure.
Brain cells communicate with one another via dopamine. Dopamine regulates our emotions. It is the neural currency of the mind,
helping make decisions. It reflects a
huge amount of invisible analysis.
Dopamine neurons generate patterns based on experience. When patterns are established dopamine
allows the brain to predict the experience.
When it experiences the unexpected the cortex takes notice. Nothing focuses the mind like
surprise. This is essential to
decision-making. The lessons of the
past are incorporated into future decisions. Our emotions quickly become accurate, more
quickly than our reason, because of dopamine, the molecular source of our feelings. Dopamine neurons automatically detect
subtle patterns we don't notice. Expertise is the wisdom that emerges from
mistakes. Mistakes should be
cultivated and carefully investigated.
The ability to learn from mistakes is essential for education. Experts are profoundly intuitive. While the emotional brain is capable of
astonishing wisdom it's also vulnerable to certain innate flaws, situations
that cause chronic gambling or burying or choosing the wrong stocks. When the brain is exposed to anything
random, it imposes a pattern. When a
person is confronted with an uncertain situation, he doesn't logically
evaluate but depends on a brief set of emotions, instincts, and mental
shortcuts. The brain skips the
math. The pain of loss is twice as
potent as the pleasure of gain and thus 'loss aversion' is more powerful, a
powerful habit that shapes our behavior.
Investors buy bonds because they hate to lose money, even though
stocks always outperform in the long term.
Loss aversion makes us irrational.
It is an innate flaw, causing us to miscalculate risks. Emotions can sabotage your common sense. Paying with credit cards fundamentally changes
the way we spend money. When you pay
with cash you feel the loss of the money out of your wallet. But the credit card makes it abstract so
you don't feel it. The brain is
anesthetized. The average household
owes $9000 in credit card dept. The average
is 8.5 credit cards per person. Unless
people get rid of their credit cards they won't be able to stay on sound
financial footing. It's hard to choose
long term gain over positive stimulus of immediate rewards. People who act more rationally don't perceive
emotion any less, they just regulate it better. We regulate our emotions by thinking about
them. We can choose to ignore the emotional
brain. Aristotle said we need to learn
how to manage our passions. The emotional brain is always tempted by
rewarding stimuli. Even at age 4, some are better at managing emotions than
others. And there is a strong correlation
between their ability to delay gratification and their performance as
adults. The prefrontal cortex is like an orchestra
conductor directing activity throughout the brain. Sometimes rationality can lead us astray. When you 'choke' it occurs from thinking
too much, thinking about things that should be on autopilot. Thinking interferes with automatic
decisions. There is such a thing as
too much analysis. You can cut
yourself off from the wisdom of your emotions. The placebo effect demonstrates the ability of
the prefrontal cortex to modulate even the most basic bodily signals. It can moderate our feelings of pain but
also lead us astray in making decisions.
We tend to experience what we expect - that Coke tastes better than
generic cola for example - even when it's not so in reality. Our expectations impact our experience and
behavior. We lose the capacity to
differentiate and assess alternatives.
If our expectations are based on false assumptions they can be very
misleading. The brain has a spectacular inability to dismiss
irrelevant information. The sticker
price on a car serves as a point of comparison, persuading us the bargain
price is a good deal, even though we all know the sticker price is a
fiction. A single piece of irrelevant
information can distort the reasoning process. When we have too much
information we lose track of which is important. Too much information can interfere with
understanding. Without the MRI about
90% of people with back pain get relief from bed rest within 7 weeks. At the same time MRIs show disc
irregularities that warrant surgery in a large proportion of people who have
NO back pain! And no one would do
surgery on someone's back if there were no pain. So the MRI may show a series of
abnormalities in your discs that are NOT the cause of your back pain but
simply a part of the aging process.
Sometimes more information can restrict thinking. Intelligent people will make foolish
decisions if you give them lots of irrelevant information. We have assumed that our moral decisions are a
result of rational thought but logic and legality have little to do with
it. Moral decisions are a unique kind
of decision. Moral distinctions are
built into the brain and don't arise from the Ten Commandments. [Perhaps the fact that it is built into the
brain is part of what it means to be created in the image of God. dlm] When people are socially isolated they have
less sympathy for the feelings of others.
They become more selfish, insensitive, and impulsive. Statistics don't activate our moral
emotions. Pictures do. Looking at one suffering face is more
powerful than overwhelming statistics.
The capacity for making moral decisions is innate but the right kind
of experience is required for it to develop.
The development process may go awry via genetic deficiencies or child
abuse. Cruelty makes us cruel. "We are designed to feel one another's
pain…" "Sympathy is one of
humanity's most basic instincts….
Evolution has programmed us to care about one another." [I always
notice the word "design" and similar terms. 'Design' seems to strongly imply foresight
and intentionality, both of which are ruled out by naturalistic evolution.
Dlm] Consumers aren't always driven by careful
considerations of price and utility.
Much of the calculation is outsourced to the emotional brain and the
ratio of pleasure to pain. It's like
an emotional tug of war. Retail stores
manipulate this cortical setup to constantly prime the pleasure centers (by
putting the most desirable and tempting items near the front of the store)
and inhibit the pain centers with words like "sale" and
"bargain." Voters tend to assimilate only the facts that
confirm what they already believe.
Other information is ignored.
The prefrontal cortex becomes an information filter. We suffer from self-imposed ignorance. It feels good to be certain, thus we trick
ourselves into being sure. To
counteract the bias for certainty we must force ourselves to think about the
information we want to ignore, that
disturbs our entrenched beliefs. Lincoln filled his cabinet with people of diverse
ideologies, encouraged vigorous debate, and was able to tolerate much
dissent. Resist the urge to suppress
the argument in your mind. While reason and feeling are both essential, each
is best suited for specific tasks.
Simple problems require reason.
But it's not always easy to tell which decisions are simple. Selecting the best jam from 200+ varieties
is not simple! For important decisions about complex items (like
which couch to purchase), think less and let your emotions decide. Novel problems require reason. If it's a genuinely new situation, without
precedent, emotions can't help. Embrace uncertainty. Extend the decision process and consider
the argument going on in your head.
Entertain competing hypotheses.
Remind yourself of what you don't know. Emotions are intelligent because they have turned
mistakes into an education from which you benefit. Bottom line:
When you make a decision, be aware of the kind of thought process
required by that decision. Study the
working of your brain and the argument in your head. It will help you avoid stupid mistakes. |
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