The reason is that none of these people is using a part of their brain that is asking, "What's next?" — synthesis
It is very similar to when an extraordinary athlete preforms at the highest levels because s/he is, "in the zone." — synthesis
This is a place where we can access perceptual reality and function at a much higher level. When we revert to our "normal" thinking, we transform perceptual reality into our personal reality and this is where all the distortions come to life. — synthesis
By doing instead of (over)-thinking, we are able to transcend the mistakes made by human misinterpretation and miscalculation (normal thinking) and live a better life without ever asking, "What's next?" — synthesis
By doing instead of (over)-thinking, we are able to transcend the mistakes made by human misinterpretation and miscalculation (normal thinking) and live a better life without ever asking, "What's next?" — synthesis
This is nice idea - overthinking or analysis/paralysis is a pet hate of mine - but how do we put it into practice exactly? How do we determine the level of reflection versus action? Or am I overthinking it? :joke: — Tom Storm
Something similar happens on a bicycle. — Bitter Crank
God intervenes in reality on a massive level when we're not looking to inconspicuously prevent as many accidents as possible without revealing its existence. Or "simulation programmers" if you like. The funny thing is, it's impossible to prove or disprove that. You would need to establish the accident rate when things are truly random, and of course we don't know that things are truly random. — RogueAI
I am not a dis-believer, only that when you bring The Absolute (God) into the conversation, what can one say?
That's it's possible there's a god that's massively interfering in the world when we're not looking. — RogueAI
By doing instead of (over)-thinking, we are able to transcend the mistakes made by human misinterpretation and miscalculation (normal thinking) and live a better life without ever asking, "What's next?" — synthesis
You seem to be omitting the fact that we first must learn how to “do” X. The first time you get behind the wheel of a car you aren’t able to just drive without thinking about driving. You have to consciously think through each step. Anyways, you seem to be describing what’s known as flow states, where individuals seem to lose themselves in a task they find meaningful and rewarding. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s book “Flow” is specifically about the importance these states have on our overall happiness and well-being. — Pinprick
Fortunately, it is not necessary to function in this highly ineffectual manner. If we can simply observe and accept (without comment), then we can see things for what they really are and respond with the most appropriate measures. — synthesis
It's not necessary to think for ourselves, that's true. We can rely on others to see things for what they really are and inform us on how to respond with the most appropriate measures. Not everyone is made to be a follower though. — praxis
Each driver is making an infinite number of driving decisions and everybody is just a micro-second or two from a lethal mis-judgement. Why do these miscalculations happen so rarely? How is it possible that there's such a great chance that you are going to arrive at the beach in one piece? — synthesis
I'd like to give credit to the first responders to this thread. Sorry if this sounds like a pun. hehe. But they have given good explanations as to why the above is so.
So, to summarize: two things -- engineering (modification and manipulation of our surroundings by our skilled and competent experts); and the discovery that driving has nothing to do with IQ, but coordination of senses and reflexes. — Caldwell
We can only make decisions based on our thinking. Reacting without thought is not decision making. It's an involuntary conditioned response. We can deliberately condition ourselves to react in particular ways, but that requires planning etc., i.e., thinking. For example, if you were speeding down the freeway and the car in front of you abruptly slowed down you'd probably hit the brakes without thinking or deciding to hit the brakes. With deliberate practice we can train ourselves to do this as well as possible. That's something that we can chose to do, and that decision would be based in reason.
Deciding something based on a gut feeling or intuition is also thinking in that it involves the subconscious, it's just not well considered, or perhaps it is well considered if deliberate conditioning were involved. — praxis
Nobody knows how thinking works on any level so I would disagree with their speculation. — synthesis
The reason is that none of these people is using a part of their brain that is asking, "What's next?" They are just "doing it." — synthesis
A lot!And I agree that people do have faith in other drivers (to some extent) but what does that have to do with what we are discussing? — synthesis
Why do these miscalculations happen so rarely? How is it possible that there's such a great chance that you are going to arrive at the beach in one piece? — synthesis
Over-thinking is over-rated! — praxis
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