Extraction Summary
Ease of processing acts like a proxy for correctness. The mind confuses familiarity and fluency with reliability.
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Ease of processing acts like a proxy for correctness. The mind confuses familiarity and fluency with reliability.
Ease of processing acts like a proxy for correctness. The mind confuses familiarity and fluency with reliability.
Ease of processing acts like a proxy for correctness. The mind confuses familiarity and fluency with reliability.
“Paraphrase: when a statement or pattern feels easy to process, the mind often mistakes that ease for credibility.”
This is one route by which bias survives even when evidence is thin.
Daniel Kahneman · 1/38 ch.
Human judgment runs through fast heuristics and slower deliberation; many errors come from treating intuitive fluency as reliable reasoning.
heuristic · Thinking, Fast and Slow
Ideas that are easier to process can feel more credible even when the underlying evidence is weak.
“Paraphrase: ease of processing can masquerade as evidence.”
Fluency reduces friction in judgment, and the mind treats that low friction as a cue for familiarity, safety, or correctness.