You don’t really know your mind, or do you?

Recent psychological research has been interpreted as casting serious doubts on many crucial aspects of the human experience: that we have “free will” (it’s complicated, hence the scare quotes), that we are at the least capable of rational thinking, and even that we are conscious. Indeed, it has become both fashionable and a bit of a cottage industry to “show,” scientific data in hand, that all those facets of mentation simply do not exist, they are illusions, figments of our imagination (though nobody has really provided an account of why on earth we have them, as metabolically costly as the apparatus that makes them possible is). All of this, of course, despite the staggering crisis in the replicability of results from psychology, which ought to make anyone reading anything in that field a bit cautious before agreeing that we are lumbering rationalizing and self-deluded robots.

The latest salvo on this topic that I’ve come across is an article by Keith Frankish, an English philosopher and writer, published in Aeon magazine with the title “Whatever you think, you don’t necessarily know your mind.” Let’s take a look.

To begin with, the title itself is interesting — and I’m perfectly aware that authors often don’t get to pick the titles of their articles or books. “Whatever you think, you don’t necessarily know your mind.” Well, no, we don’t necessarily do, of course. That would be like arguing, say, that whatever we see with our eyes is necessarily a true reflection of the external world. But we know better: we understand about illusions, mirages, the unreliability of our senses under certain environmental conditions, and how internal states (e.g., being inebriated, or under the influence of drugs) may alter our visual perceptions, sometimes drastically so. Heck, people sitting in sensorial deprivation tanks often develop very vivid hallucinations that appear terrifyingly real to them, even though they know that there is nothing out there. So, taken at face value, the title of Frankish’s article argues for close to nothing: the question isn’t, and never has been, whether our access to our own thoughts is always reliable, but only whether it is reliable enough for the purposes of reflecting on what we do and why.

Frankish tells us that many philosophers think that we have privileged access to our inner thoughts, and that moreover this access is largely immune from error. I think the first part is hard to doubt (though people have tried), while the value of the second part hinges on just what “largely” means. There is no reason to think that our inner sense of awareness is more reliable than our outer senses, and it may be less so. Indeed, even our regular senses differ among themselves in both precision and reliability, just as they do for other animals. Our sense of smell, for instance, is poor compared to our vision, but for dogs it is the other way around.

Frankish briefly summarizes the ideas of two philosophers who fall outside of the mainstream as he defined it: Gilbert Ryle and Peter Carruthers. Ryle thought that we don’t actually learn about our inner thoughts via an inner sense, but rather from our own behavior, which means that other people, somewhat paradoxically, may know our mind better than we do. This, of course, is the behaviorist position that has (justifiably, in my opinion) been the butt of a number of jokes, such as: two behaviourists have just had sex; one turns to the other and says: “That was great for you, darling. How was it for me?”

Carruthers’ idea relies on empirical results in experimental social psychology (see caveat above!) demonstrating that at the least sometimes not only we are mistaken about what we think we think, but we confabulate, i.e., make up explanations for our behaviors that cannot possibly be true. A typical experiment, for instance, shows that when people are offered a choice of several identical items they tend to pick the one on the right. When asked to justify their (unjustifiable, since the things are all equal!) choice they invent some story to make sense of what they have done.

This shouldn’t be particularly surprising, since the brain is trying to make sense of a situation in which it is faced with a series of facts that appear to be in contradiction with each other. It then produces some hypothesis about what happened: well, those objects look like they are identical, but I picked one above the others, so there must have been a reason, so they cannot possibly really be identical with each other. Confabulation is a very interesting phenomenon, and something of which we all have to be aware. But is it enough to make the stronger claims that Carruthers, Ryle, and Frankish want to make?

In The Opacity of Mind, Carruthers speculates that we and other primates have evolved systems to reliably guess about other people’s thoughts and intentions, not our own, and that we then began to direct those same inferential tools toward our inner mental processes. Since we have additional sensory data when it comes to ourselves — not just our outward behavior, but also feelings, pains, perceptions, etc., then we think we can more reliably tell what is going on inside our own minds.

The genesis part of the theory is speculative, of course, and there probably is no way to actually test it, as in many other evolutionary psychological scenarios. But I don’t have any problem with the idea that part of what constitutes our conscious thinking is an interpretation of our largely unconscious thoughts, making them explicit. The issue is that that isn’t the only thing we do consciously. We can also challenge our own subconscious thoughts, deliberately go after their logical implications, evaluate how they square with our beliefs and priorities, and so forth.

Which brings me to the major example brought forth by Frankish in support of Carruthers-type interpretations of conscious thinking. Turns out that we are all, deep down, “racists.” Meaning that psychological experiments (again, see caveat above!) seem to show that — when we are not paying attention — even people who claim to be opposed to racism behave in ways that indicate a subconscious level of racial bias. From this, Frankish concludes: “Such behaviour is usually said to manifest an implicit bias, which conflicts with the person’s explicit beliefs. But [Carruthers’] theory offers a simpler explanation. People think that the stereotypes are true but also that it is not acceptable to admit this and therefore say they are false. Moreover, they say this to themselves too, in inner speech, and mistakenly interpret themselves as believing it. They are hypocrites but not conscious hypocrites.”

I beg to differ. First off, it isn’t clear by what measure of “simpler” this second interpretation would allegedly satisfy Occam’s razor better than the implicit bias explanation. Most importantly, though, no, sorry, when I say that I firmly believe people should be treated equally regardless of their ethnic background I’m not lying, nor am I being a hypocrite, unwittingly or not. What I’m doing is to consciously override my unconscious biases, on the basis of rational deliberation over the issue. That is what makes human beings so different from any other animal on earth, so far as we know, and it is a precious thing indeed. But of course if you don’t believe that we are conscious, and if you believe that we always confabulate, then your must conclude that people are latent hypocrites, about everything. Which raises the obvious self-referential question: was Frankish just confabulating when he wrote the Aeon article?

210 thoughts on “You don’t really know your mind, or do you?

  1. Disagreeable Me (@Disagreeable_I)

    Hi Marc

    Any research on that? What I’ve seen is culturally and community driven.

    Perhaps, but I suspect there’s more to it than that. Anecdotally, I’ve known racist dogs. As in, I knew a dog that would attack any black dog on sight, but only black dogs. If dogs can be xenophobes in this sense, it seems plausible that there’s some basic instinct in play which may affect humans to.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Seth Leon

    “Ryle thought that we don’t actually learn about our inner thoughts via an inner sense, but rather from our own behavior, which means that other people, somewhat paradoxically, may know our mind better than we do. This, of course, is the behaviorist position that has (justifiably, in my opinion) been the butt of a number of jokes, such as: two behaviourists have just had sex; one turns to the other and says: “That was great for you, darling. How was it for me?””

    I am just now reading and would certainly defer to those more in the know, but from what I have read this seems uncharitable. Yes, I think Ryle argued that there wasn’t some ghost in the machine perceiving our ‘knowledge that’ in real time. He clearly states that he doesn’t want to be misinterpreted as imply that we don’t ‘know’ what we up to.

    “To safeguard against this misinterpretation I say quite summarily first, that we do usually know what we are about, but that no phosphorescence-story is required to explain how we are apprised of it; second, that knowing what we are about does not entail an incessant actual monitoring or scrutiny of our doings and feelings, but only the propensity inter alia to avow them, when we are in die mood to do so; and, third, that the fact that we generally know what we are about does not entail our coming across any happenings of ghostly status.”

    Ryle, Gilbert. The Concept of Mind (Kindle Locations 3316-3321). Lulu.com. Kindle Edition.

    I also think rather than arguing that others in general know us better than we know ourselves I think he rightly is pointing out an asymmetry in access that depends on the kind of knowledge being talked about.

    “A residual difference in the supplies of the requisite data makes some differences in degree between what I can know about myself and what I can know about you, but these differences are not all in favour of self-knowledge. In certain quite important respects it is easier for me to find out what I want to know about you than it is for me to find out the same sorts of things about myself. In certain other important respects it is harder.”

    Ryle, Gilbert. The Concept of Mind (Kindle Locations 3199-3203). Lulu.com. Kindle Edition.

    Emily Pronin has done good work pointing out this asymmetry with regard to introspection and how we attribute to intent to ourselves an others.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. synred

    Or maybe the black dog hating dog had a bad experience with a black dog. It all just stories..

    I was bit by a dog when about 8 years old which may be made me a cat-person. Even that is just a story…

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  4. Massimo Post author

    All,

    Very interesting conversation, as usual!

    Socratic,

    about optical illusions, I’m not sure we “fall” for them” once we know about them. Take the illusion that a pencil becomes crooked if it is seem half above and half below water. I cannot avoid the perception of seeing it that way, but since I know it’s an illusion, I do not act on it. I don’t thereby go around claiming to have discovered a strange new phenomenon that alters the shape of objects at the interface between air and water, and so on.

    DM,

    you may find the differences between Frankish and me hard to get excited about, but the fact is that we are seeing a veritable assault on reason and consciousness because of the sort of research Frankish mentions. See the latest book by Julian Baggini, for instance, in defense of too much criticism of our ability to reason.

    The example about racism isn’t poor, in my judgment, and it is Frankish’s anyway, I just responded to it. And no, we are not “clearly” talking about unconscious responses when we talk about racism. When I see Trump’s supporters shouting racist slurs I take them to be perfectly conscious of what they are doing, and I find it extremely disturbing.

    Also, I find the idea of unconscious “racism” to be oxymoronic. To me racist is such only when it is a position that one consciously assents to.

    Seth,

    I don’t have a bone against Ryle, I simply commented on what Frankish says. And of course the one about behaviorists having sex is just a joke, not meant as a serious argument against behaviorism.

    I’m good with the Ryle quotes you pulled out, I’m certainly not going to argue for any ghost in the machine. The second quote ends on an ambiguous note, however, and I would have to check the context to comment properly.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. SocraticGadfly

    Marc, there’s been research on how, after dividing people into two different groups, members will perceive members of the other group negatively as the “outgroup.”

    That said, I think this is a prime example of both/and; it’s both nature and nurture. And, it’s kind of silly to even look for exact percentages, like “it’s 45 percent genes, 55 percent environment.”

    First, we don’t know what genes are responsible for outgroup intolerance. But, given that other primates exhibit some of this, it’s reasonable to me to hold that it’s somewhat genetically caused.

    That said, chimp bands are geographically separate. That’s an environmental factor.

    Fights over food (and wiimmin) are both environmental AND non-outgroup genetic, as fights over wimmin, especially, happen within one’s own ingroup.

    So, to the degree that outgroup angst is a heritable tendency, I suspect it’s well, well, below 50 percent when specifically designated outgroup angst, and not resources protection.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. wtc48

    For a non-culture based (i.e. instinctive) xenophobia, I think one would have to examine behavior of group-dwelling primates for evidence of pre-human hostility to adjacent groups of the same species, in order to suppose that something of this kind may have existed among early humans.

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  7. synred

    Perhaps ‘xenophobia’ is just a more successful ‘meme’. Societies that demonized others took their land and prospered… Institutions that justified slavery due to the inferiority of the enslaved got big endowments from wealthy slave holders and prospered.

    Unlike what happened in the ‘primitive’ ancestral environment, we have evidence for these things;

    At a minimum anybody with slave ancestor should get free tuition, room and board. There great-great grandparents already paid.

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  8. SocraticGadfly

    Massimo, on proper use of language, that I’ll buy indeed — IF it never originated at a conscious level. And, did you see the link (includes interview with him) about Baggini’s book I posted on G+?

    “Unconscious stereotyping,” if it started with family of origin issues which became ingrained and automatic … what is the right word or phrase? If one remains unaware as an adult, I would just call it “unconscious stereotyping.” But, if a Project Implicit test indicates “X,” or even more, a friend carefully but straightforwardly says, “You may not be aware of it, Steve, BUT …” and I reject that, then I’m OK with using the word “racism.”

    This is another illustrator of how consciousness is not a hard problem, in my opinion, but it IS a complex one.

    Liked by 2 people

  9. synred

    How do you distinguish out group hostility from territoriality/tribalism. This occurs among many social animals — chimps, cats, wolves and people who look the same and a genetically very close.

    E.g., Northern Ireland. When there are no differences tribes will invent them. The children will be carefully taught’ that the other guys are bad, stupid and ugly.

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  10. synred

    I do find the notion that ‘political correctness’ is driving us to perdition, ah, well, incorrect. Things were not only worse in the 50s, they were much worse in the 1830s. Unless the Donald gets in we’ll muddle through.

    I do miss Dan none-the-less.

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  11. marc levesque

    DM,

    “Perhaps, but I suspect there’s more to it than that. Anecdotally, I’ve known racist dogs. As in, I knew a dog that would attack any black dog on sight, but only black dogs. If dogs can be xenophobes in this sense, it seems plausible that there’s some basic instinct in play which may affect humans to.”

    I agree, it can’t be reduced to a nature or nurture dichotomy. But I don’t find your example supports biology more than culture. I can see many ways that the dog could have learned this behavior towards black dogs with or without the help of humans.

    Socratic,

    “Marc, there’s been research on how, after dividing people into two different groups, members will perceive members of the other group negatively as the “outgroup.” … So, to the degree that outgroup angst is a heritable tendency, I suspect it’s well, well, below 50 percent when specifically designated outgroup angst, and not resources protection.”

    I agree. And if I’m following the research you mention, I think it’s foremost about culture: dividing people into two groups sets them up to play out cultural beliefs concerning groups, so that’s probably what the results mostly reflect. On genetic percentages, I’d say it’s way below 50%, but whatever ‘it’ is (what % and what exactly is being measured), I don’t think cultural level terminology (xenophobia in this case) can be mapped into (or onto) ‘lower’ biological or genetic processes in a meaningful way.

    Garth,

    The Other-Race Effect Develops During Infancy: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2566514/

    Liked by 4 people

  12. Thomas Jones

    “Action is transitory–a step, a blow,
    The motion of a muscle–this way or that–
    ‘Tis done, and in the after-vacancy
    We wonder at ourselves like men betrayed . . . .”
    —Wordsworth

    “We first make our habits, and then our habits make us.” —Dryden

    See, even poets have thoughts on such subjects and while their poetry might not qualify as psychological studies, for what it’s worth they are more aesthetically pleasing and from my vantage frequently yield greater clarity of insight.

    I’m all-in with Massimo’s expressed reservations about the Frankish piece in Aeon, and I think the question Massimo poses to end his OP is right on the mark. Much of my reaction is a personal quirk that has only intensified over time. But the more I encounter phrases like “subconscious thinking” and “conflation” the more annoyed I become as a reader. One part–the seeming ubiquity of their use as explanations–can perhaps be attributed to my choice of reading material; another–closely related–is the ease with which they enter the vernacular and are deployed in ways that confuse complex topics instead of clarifying them.

    You buy a new automobile and suddenly you begin to see the same model everywhere. Where had they been hiding before you decided to buy one? Okay, a form of confirmation bias, or perhaps some “implicit” privileging or validation of the soundness of one’s choice that one might intuit if so inclined without the need of a psychological study to slap a label on it.

    On the subject of conflation, I read a version of a psychological study of the type to which Massimo alludes. They picked the sock on the right and, when asked to explain, were unaware of this (overriding?) tendency. Thus (and I’m limited in a full appreciation of the nature of this study), the tendency to embellish instead of simply responding “I don’t know why” becomes ad hoc reasoning rather than perhaps trying to indulge a person in authority. (And, no, I’m not being dismissive of ad hoc reasoning or explanations. It just that I believe we must account for the relational aspects involved.)

    A short parable:

    There was an old lady who lived in a shoe. On Mondays, they did the laundry, and she instructed the newest arrivals to sort the underwear and socks. When the old lady returned she was taken aback. “I told you to sort the underwear and socks.” To which they responded, “We did. We put the white underwear and socks in this basket and the black underwear and socks in the other. We need more baskets.”

    A computer simulation test:

    A person in a passenger car drives down a one lane road and sees a trailer truck approaching from the opposite direction. Collision seems inevitable. Does the passenger car driver turn off the road to the left or right? (Am I left-handed or right-handed? Was the car manufactured for use in the US or the UK?)

    Random thoughts:

    Humans are not sock puppets, a sock is not a pair of socks, a goose is not a gaggle.

    Liked by 1 person

  13. SocraticGadfly

    Thomas (and Massimo):

    Reminds me of another subject.

    Frankish has written about a new ethical twist on the trolley problem.

    I didn’t find it that new or that much of a twist.

    But, I did think of a new, Hamiltonian twist on the trolley problem.

    You have two siblings on one track. You have five nieces and nephews on the other. You “should” throw the switch to kill the siblings. How many professional biologists actually would?

    Liked by 1 person

  14. garthdaisy

    Marc

    “Any research on that? What I’ve seen is culturally and community driven.”

    Just my own observations and experience interacting with other humans for 50 years, as well as studying my own feelings and fears. Plus everything I have read. I think you are right that it is largely driven by culture and community, but this is done via indoctrination of erroneous facts about the way the world actually is. In racist cultures and communities children are taught erroneous facts about race and, and even worse, true facts, like evolution, are kept from them. Double fact whammy. Parents teach erroneous facts about race to their children because they themselves were also taught erroneous facts by their parents. That’s culture. That’s community. A big pile of facts about the way the world is and ought to be. Many of those facts are erroneous and that’s where the racism comes from.

    People aren’t taught to hate. They have the “capacity” for both hate or compassion. Different facts about the way the world actually is will trigger either hate or compassion. Think “the expanding circle of care.” We care for those inside our circle and are fearful and suspicious of those outside our circle. Facts about the way the world is decide who you put inside or outside of that circle. If I’m taught the German’s are “my people” that fact trigger’s my tribalism and it will also trigger my xenophobia or fear of non German’s.

    My mom is racist. I was 17 before I knew they were called “Brazil nuts.” It’s not because my mom is more hateful than me. It’s because she wasn’t taught Darwin. Before Darwin, everyone was racist. They had no good reason not to be.

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  15. garthdaisy

    Socratic

    “And, actually, Garth, plenty of intelligent, or “otherwise intelligent,” people, are racist.”

    Key phrase “otherwise intelligent.” But actually I didn’t say it was about intelligence. It’s about facts. Correct facts vs erroneous facts.

    Intelligent people with erroneous facts do exist, unfortunately. It’s a dangerous combo.

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  16. SocraticGadfly

    My pardon, Garth, you did say “ignorance,” and not intelligence.

    You’re still wrong, at least without some modification.

    Plenty of well-read people simply reject that differences between so-called races are minimal. They’re not ignorant; rather, they refuse to incorporate knowledge at hand into their mental systems.

    The phrase “willfully ignorant,” I would accept. It’s a pity we don’t have a one-word equivalent for this in English. But, ignorant without the qualifier? Sorry, no.

    Oh, and “erroneous facts”? I think you just won the oxymoron of the year award or something.

    Liked by 1 person

  17. ejwinner

    The notion that neuroscience has anything to say about psychology is laughable. The notion that ethology has anything to tell us about human behaviour is laughable, the notion that biological evolution or genetics has anything tell us about human behavior is laughable.

    So thank you for this comedy.

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  18. synred

    The notion that neuroscience has anything to say about psychology is laughable. The notion that ethology has anything to tell us about human behaviour is laughable, the notion that biological evolution or genetics has anything tell us about human behavior is laughable

    Huh? So what are we? Ghost?

    Brains, hormones, etc. irrelevant?

    This guys behavior was not affected by the iron bar throughh his brain?
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phineas_Gage

    I hope I’m missing something. Perhaps your being ironic respoinding to some absurdity I missed…

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  19. Disagreeable Me (@Disagreeable_I)

    Hi Massimo,

    The example about racism isn’t poor, in my judgment, and it is Frankish’s anyway, I just responded to it.

    You miss my point. The example of racism is a good one. The example of your belief that people should be treated equally is the poor example. This is not the kind of belief that is relevant to the issue of unconscious racism. It is too abstract, too high level.

    And no, we are not “clearly” talking about unconscious responses when we talk about racism.

    We’re not talking about racism. We’re talking about unconscious racism — racism the racist is unaware of. The whole point of Frankish’s article is that we don’t know our own minds, so conscious racism is irrelevant.

    When I see Trump’s supporters shouting racist slurs I take them to be perfectly conscious of what they are doing, and I find it extremely disturbing.

    Likewise. But conscious racism is irrelevant to Frankish’s article.

    To me racist is such only when it is a position that one consciously assents to.

    If you want to define it as such, then OK. But there is a real issue, I believe, that I’m trying to point out with the phrase “unconscious racism”. For example, there was a study that showed that people with black-sounding names found it harder to get a booking confirmed on AirBnB. AirBnB took it seriously enough that they’re taking steps to address things. I don’t think the hosts who chose the guest called William over the guest called Jamal are doing so because they are consciously racist (or at least not all of them are). I think they do it because they have an unconscious bias. They are behaving hypocritically even though they probably also believe in an abstract sense that people should be treated equally regardless of ethnicity.

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  20. Disagreeable Me (@Disagreeable_I)

    Hi Arthur, Marc

    I can see many ways that the dog could have learned this behavior towards black dogs with or without the help of humans.

    Or maybe the black dog hating dog had a bad experience with a black dog.

    Yeah, I think that is in fact what happened.

    So I guess it’s not a great example for xenophobia, but it may be a model for some instances of racism. If you, say, meet some small number of Taiwanese people who happen to be paranoid, you may be prone to over-generalise and think of Taiwanese people as paranoid. So I guess racism can be cause both by xenophobia and over-generalisation.

    Liked by 2 people

  21. brodix

    The function of the mind is to make distinctions and decisions. Someone’s color is a distinction. Decisions based on that will be also due to a wide range of other factors, usually ranging around degrees of cooperation versus competition.
    So the problem is not so much with the distinctions, but the decisions and how to mollify the inevitable conflicts. Arguing that the distinctions don’t exist is to close off a significant function of the purpose of the mind.
    In fact, it is the very fact that we are such a homogenous species and are rapidly evolving toward ever more monolithic cultural habits and desires that is a much larger environmental problem, than that we don’t appreciate other’s over-generalizations, while assuming the rightness of our own.
    Competition is a consequence of everyone wanting the same things, rather than finding ways to balance all the various requirements and desires. To point out my “agenda,” we live in a thermodynamic environment and either we learn to use resources at the rate we and our environment can regenerate them, or we cycle through bubbles of expansion and collapse. Nature is not going to change for our desires.
    As for the argument that we don’t know our own minds, I fail to be impressed by those who do study the mind, as they seem to fall in their own conceptual ruts. As mobile organisms, our thought processes are linear, but nature is cyclical and reciprocal. So the effect is that instead of understanding the larger context, the feedback often just reenforces our belief systems.
    Just because a little is good, doesn’t always mean more is better.

    Liked by 1 person

  22. davidlduffy

    Some recent science: 1) The recent literature on “feeling of knowing”, and other introspective estimates of how certain your knowledge is: we usually have a pretty good conscious idea of the accuracy of our intuitive guesses; a related phenomenon is tip of the tongue, where you are sure that you actually know an answer, even though you cannot currently retrieve it into consciousness. 2) The Fast and Slow systems of thinking are also called “unconscious” and “analytic”, especially when using distractor tasks to consume one’s conscious attention from the true decision task. We can measure what types of problems unconscious and conscious processes are good for (and look at brain imaging too). Apparently one is often more emotionally satisfied with an unconscious cum intuitive decision than with an analytic decision. 3) Essential role of conscious attention when searching a crowd for one face.

    I liked Charles Tart’s comment that what may be a conscious process for one person may be unconscious in another, and shifts over occasions. In many ways this is a trivial observation eg many learned skills, extending to emotional self-regulation, biofeedback, perception.

    Liked by 1 person

  23. Massimo Post author

    DM,

    “The example of your belief that people should be treated equally is the poor example. This is not the kind of belief that is relevant to the issue of unconscious racism. It is too abstract, too high level”

    I’m sorry, but that is what racism is in my mind. It isn’t a subconscious weariness about people who look different from me, it is a conscious decision that they truly are inferior and do not deserve equal treatment. I seriously don’t think this is a particularly “abstract” idea, and certainly not at “too high a level” to be pertinent to this discussion.

    “We’re not talking about racism. We’re talking about unconscious racism”

    I am rejecting the latter term as a category mistake.

    “conscious racism is irrelevant to Frankish’s article.”

    It is most definitely relevant, if Frankish is to get away with statements like “we are all racists.”

    “But there is a real issue, I believe, that I’m trying to point out with the phrase “unconscious racism””

    Yes, of course there is an issue. And the only way I know how to address it is to make people conscious of their biases. So I don’t think the psychological studies are irrelevant, on the contrary, they are crucial. What I reject is the non-sequitur that therefore somehow conscious rational analysis is overblown, an illusion, etc.. Conscious rational analysis is the only thing that can improve things in the world.

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