how the need for rationality doesn’t become self evident for med students in the process of becoming a doctor,
Is it just a matter of terminology? I would guess that all med students will agree that they should be able to make a correct diagnosis (where correct = corresponding to the underlying reality) and then prescribe appropriate treatment (where appropriate = effective in achieving goals set for this patient).
Whatever the terminology, they should make the connection between the process of decision making and the science of decision making, which they don’t seem to do. Medicine is like this isolated bubble where every insight must come from the medical community itself.
I found overcoming bias and became a rationalist during med school. Finding the blog was purely accidental, although I recognized the need for understanding my thinking, so I’m not sure what form this need would have taken given a slightly different circumstance.
Is it just a matter of terminology? I would guess that all med students will agree that they should be able to make a correct diagnosis (where correct = corresponding to the underlying reality) and then prescribe appropriate treatment (where appropriate = effective in achieving goals set for this patient).
Whatever the terminology, they should make the connection between the process of decision making and the science of decision making, which they don’t seem to do. Medicine is like this isolated bubble where every insight must come from the medical community itself.
I found overcoming bias and became a rationalist during med school. Finding the blog was purely accidental, although I recognized the need for understanding my thinking, so I’m not sure what form this need would have taken given a slightly different circumstance.