by Richard » 26 Feb 2019 14:04
I doubt that it's possible to reliably identify your own cognitive blindness (otherwise it wouldn't be a blindness), but I believe that you can monitor some cases of blindness. Simply being aware of the issues (such as by reading Thinking, Fast and Slow) enables you to have the potential to monitor yourself. This isn't the same as monitoring yourself to become unbiased however. As an example, I have a personal favourite theory of cognitive processing (something similar to a spreading activation model but with a fixed number of items being in your consciousness at any given time), and when I read about psychology experiments (honestly, I don't do this very often) I always see if my personal theory can explain the results and it usually does. However, I am aware of the existence of confirmation biases which in my case would mean that I interpret the results in a way that makes them fit my theory. From all this, I am aware that I may be adapting the results so that they fit my theory, and that other people with other theories may adapt the results in a different way. So I think I am monitoring my confirmation bias. However, this monitoring has no real effect on my beliefs at a deep level - despite knowing that I may be misinterpreting results, I still believe in my personal theory.