Daniel Kahneman's two systems of thinking

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System 2 is engaged when dealing with tasks in which attention is required and necessary for completing the task, e.g. searching for at specific person in a crowd or parallel parking a car <ref>Kahneman, D. (2012) Thinking, fast and slow . London: Penguin.</ref>.
 
System 2 is engaged when dealing with tasks in which attention is required and necessary for completing the task, e.g. searching for at specific person in a crowd or parallel parking a car <ref>Kahneman, D. (2012) Thinking, fast and slow . London: Penguin.</ref>.
  
System 1 does as mentioned rely on knowledge and rutine  
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System 1 does as mentioned rely on knowledge and rutine, "and continuously reports impressions, intuitions, intensions and feelings"<ref>Kahneman, D. (2012) Thinking, fast and slow . London: Penguin. side 24</ref>
 
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For the most part, system 1 runs automatically and system 2 in a low-effort mode.
 
For the most part, system 1 runs automatically and system 2 in a low-effort mode.

Revision as of 11:56, 14 February 2021

Contents

Abstract

In the book "Thinking, fast and slow", writen by the nobel price winner in econonics and professor in psychology Daniel Kahneman, two different methods of thinking is presented, called system 1 and 2.

System 1 is engaged when a subject is dealing with a task that requires little to no effort, e.g. simple mathematical calculations or rutine work [1].

System 2 is engaged when dealing with tasks in which attention is required and necessary for completing the task, e.g. searching for at specific person in a crowd or parallel parking a car [2].

System 1 does as mentioned rely on knowledge and rutine, "and continuously reports impressions, intuitions, intensions and feelings"[3]

For the most part, system 1 runs automatically and system 2 in a low-effort mode.

Big idea

Application

Limitations

References

  1. Kahneman, D. (2012) Thinking, fast and slow . London: Penguin.
  2. Kahneman, D. (2012) Thinking, fast and slow . London: Penguin.
  3. Kahneman, D. (2012) Thinking, fast and slow . London: Penguin. side 24
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