Author Question: What is meant by the warning, our power to reason with certainty can have ominous results ? What ... (Read 83 times)

tingc95

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What is meant by the warning, our power to reason with certainty can have ominous results ?
 
  What will be an ideal response

Question 2

Which of the following is probably an expression of the influence of the Stereotyping Heuristic?
 
  (a) Brandon is a huge fan of the San Francisco Giants. If he sees anything at all with the SF Giant's logo on it, a shirt, a coffee cup, a banner, you know Brandon is going to want to buy it.
  (b) There is always another way to tweak the artwork this way or that. But we have to get the marketing materials to the conference soon. So I say that the design is good to go.
  (c) I never get a flu shot. When I was a kid I had a terrible infection and the doctor gave me a hypo of penicillin right in the butt. Wow did that hurt
  (d) This year two of the people in our office died. One was hit by a drunk driver last summer when he was out biking, and the other had a fatal heart attack while shoveling snow. We all worked in the same office, reported to the same boss, and both of them were about my age. Makes me not want to do anything that is physically exerting.
  (e) The prosecuting attorney pointed at the accused and said, For a man like him, raised in his religious culture, it is a huge dishonor if a wife is not totally subservient to her husband. That is how we know that the defendant is guilty of murder. I say that he is the one who beat his wife to death. His motive was that he thought she had somehow dishonored him.



dreamfighter72

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Answer to Question 1

At times, like a freight train thundering recklessly down the tracks, our capacity for certainty drives us headlong toward conclusions that turn out to be patently wrongheaded. We are certain that our assumptions imply those conclusions, so we move ahead perhaps not thinking about whether those conclusions make any sense in their own right. Consider, for example, the religious extremists who use ideologically based valid argument to justify wars, rape, beheadings, and brutally barbaric acts of terrorism. How can we prevent that ideological freight train from reaching the wrong destination? The answer lies at the starting point. Are all of our beliefs, values, assumptions, and interpretations true? A healthy sense of skepticism, the study of human history, and a great deal of life experience suggests that the probability of personal infallibility approximates zero. Even the most learned, saintly, and wise among us can be mistaken.

Answer to Question 2

e



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