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Intuition or Intellect
by
David G. Myers
Bush
Needs a Fact-Check, Not a Gut Check
Sure,
intuition can develop with experience. But trusting your hunches has
perils, too.
Say this much for President Bush: He is not deaf to the inner whispers
of his intuition.
"I know there's no evidence that shows the death penalty has a
deterrent effect," he reportedly said as Texas governor, "but I just
feel in my gut it must be true."
Six years and two wars into his presidency, the president still relies
on his gut instincts. His recent fly-in to Baghdad was, he explained to
U.S. troops, "to look Prime Minister [Nouri] Maliki in the eyes — to
determine whether or not he is as dedicated to a free Iraq as you are."
The
president's snap assessment? "I believe he is." He told Larry King in
an interview last month: "If you make decisions based upon what you
believe in your heart of hearts, you stay resolved."
In flying by the seat of his pants, Bush has much company.
"Buried deep within each and every one of us, there is an instinctive,
heart-felt awareness that provides — if we allow it to — the most
reliable guide," offered Prince Charles, whose decisions also have been
relentlessly second-guessed for much of his adult life.
For those disposed to follow their inner guide, today's pop psychology
offers books on "intuitive healing," "intuitive learning," "intuitive
managing," "intuitive trading" and much more.
So, when hiring and firing, fearing and risking, investing and
gambling, should we follow Bush's example and tune down that
analytical, linear, left-brained mind? Should we stop obsessing over
logic and data and trust the force within?
Today's psychological science documents a vast intuitive mind. More
than we realize, our thinking, memory and attitudes operate on two
levels — conscious and unconscious — with the larger part operating
automatically. We know more than we know we know.
Studies show that as we gain expertise, even reasoned judgments can
become automatic. Rather than wend their way through a decision tree,
experienced car mechanics and physicians will often, after a quick
listen and look, diagnose problems.
Chess
masters intuitively know the right move. And Japanese chicken sexers
use complex pattern recognition to separate newborn pullets and
cockerels with near perfect accuracy.
Moreover, we're all experts when it comes to reading people's emotions.
Psychologists Nalini Ambady and Robert Rosenthal report that after
viewing mere "thin slices" of college professors' teaching — three
two-second clips — observers' ratings of them correlate well with
students' end-of-semester ratings.
To
gain a sense of someone's energy and warmth, six seconds will often do.
So, is our president smart to harness the powers of his intuition? Or
should he, and we, be subjecting our hunches to scrutiny?
Intuition is important, but we often underestimate its perils.
My
geographical intuition tells me that Reno is east of Los Angeles and
that Rome is south of New York. But I am wrong.
"The
first principle," said Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman,
"is that you must not fool yourself — and you are the easiest person to
fool."
In
hundreds of experiments, people have greatly overestimated their
eyewitness recollections, their interviewee assessments and their
stock-picking talents. It's humbling to realize how often we misjudge
and mispredict reality and then display "belief perseverance" when
facing disconfirming information.
We fear things that claim lives in bunches. Smoking kills 400,000
Americans a year, and carbon dioxide looks to be the biggest weapon of
mass destruction, but terrorists frighten us more. We are told, but are
unmoved by, statistics showing that the most dangerous part of air
travel is the drive to the airport.
Intuition — automatic, effortless, unreasoned thinking — guides our
lives. But intuition also errs, and false intuitions may go before a
fall.
After meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin, Bush felt that he had
him sized up. "I looked the man in the eye," Bush said. "I was able to
get a sense of his soul."
But
the president has since expressed frustration at Putin's
democracy-suffocating record. Bush also told Bob Woodward that
intuition was a key to his decision to launch the Iraq war: "I'm a gut
player. I rely on my instincts." Bush still insists that he made the
right decision, but most Americans now disagree.
The president, like all of us, should check his intuitions against the
facts. He can welcome the creative whispers of the unseen mind, but
only as the beginning of inquiry.
Smart
thinking often begins with hunches but continues as one examines
assumptions, evaluates evidence, invites critique and tests
conclusions.
As
Proverbs says: "He who trusts in his own heart is a fool."
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From the Op-Ed page, Los Angeles Times, August 22, 2006
David G. Myers, a social psychologist at Michigan's Hope College, is
the author of Intuition:
Its Powers and Perils
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