Common sense suggests that we know our own thoughts directly, but that we infer the thoughts of other people. ███ ██████ ███████ ██ ██████████████ ███ ███████████ █████ ███ ██████ ██ █████ ██ ███████ ████████ ███ ███ ██████ ██ ██████ ███
Standard assumption ·We know our own thoughts directly
Elaborate on analogy ·Expertise makes us think we see relationships directly, when we're really just making very quick inferences
Example: chess experts' ability to "see" whether a position is weak or strong. Experts make inferences so fast they don't notice they're making them. And we are experts in our own thinking, so we don't notice our own inferences.
Mistaken implication of psychologists' perspective ·Might seem that psychologists are saying we infer our own thoughts based on observations of our own behavior
The phrase "perilously close" indicates the author thinks that it would be dangerous for someone to think we infer thoughts based on our own behavior.
Clarification ·Psychologists say we infer thoughts based on internal feelings and emotions
So, we're not making inferences based on seeing our own external behavior.
Passage Style
Phenomenon-hypothesis (RC)
Single position
13.
According to the psychologists cited ██ ███ ████████ ███ ████████ ██ ██████ █████████ ██ ███ ███ ████████ ██████ ████ ███ ████ ████
Question Type
Stated
The author tells us the psychologists’ explanation for why we think we have direct knowledge in P2: “From a psychological perspective, we become so expert in making incredibly fast introspective inferences about our thinking that we fail to notice that we are making them.”
a
we ignore the ████████ ████ ██ ███████ █████████ ███ ██████████ ██ ███ ██████████ ██ ████ █████ ███ ███████ █████████
Ignoring feedback isn’t mentioned as the reason psychologists claim we believe we know our own thoughts directly.
The psychologists say that our own thoughts are always inferred through our expert inference-making. So it’s not correct to say that they believe knowledge of our own thoughts is “usually unmediated due to our expertise.” (”Unmediated” means direct.)
24%
c
we are unaware ██ ███ ███████████ █████████ ████ █████ ██ ██ ██████ █████ ██ ███ ████████
Suppoted. This is the closest answer to the idea that we’re so expert at inference-making that we don’t notice we’re making inferences.
Passages that focus on describing or evaluating potential explanations for a given phenomenon. Causal reasoning features prominently in these passages.