Individual Representation in a Community of Knowledge.

Clicks: 145
ID: 33182
2019
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Abstract
An individual's knowledge is collective in at least two senses: it often comes from other people's testimony, and its deployment in reasoning and action requires accuracy underwritten by other people's knowledge. What must one know to participate in a collective knowledge system? Here, we marshal evidence that individuals retain detailed causal information for a few domains and coarse causal models embedding markers indicating that these details are available elsewhere (others' heads or the physical world) for most domains. This framework yields further questions about metacognition, source credibility, and individual computation that are theoretically and practically important. Belief polarization depends on the web of epistemic dependence and is greatest for those who know the least, plausibly due to extreme conflation of others' knowledge with one's own.
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rabb2019individualtrends Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Rabb, Nathaniel;Fernbach, Philip M;Sloman, Steven A;
Journal trends in cognitive sciences
Year 2019
DOI S1364-6613(19)30199-8
URL
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