Are you a neurological outlier in some respect so that you could not grasp the implications of my question, or are you just being an annoyingly uncooperative communicator? By the way, I don’t believe for your claim about thousands for a split-second. I wouldn’t even believe it if you had said “hundreds”. I’ll be impressed if you manage in reasonable time for “tens”.
I had failed to generate this as a hypothesis, but now that you bring it up, it makes the second possibility appear much more likely since it provides a possible motivation for the non-cooperativity. (This looks a bit like the conjunction fallacy, but it’s not really because possibilities that I had simply failed to think of play a role here...)
I responded to what I regarded as a ridiculous question. I’ve said enough to indicate my view of the seriousness of false confession. Do you really find it difficult to believe I could come up with countless examples of behavior that, say, you and I would agree is mildly antisocial—my neighbor’s failure to trim weeds that were partly obstructing our block’s common driveway, for one? You’re being pointless.
Right, because the people making false confessions aren’t under enough psychological pressure already...
Can you give me an example of what you consider to be a mildly antisocial act?
At arbitrary costs to themselves… ?
Of course. I can probably give you thousands of them.
Are you a neurological outlier in some respect so that you could not grasp the implications of my question, or are you just being an annoyingly uncooperative communicator? By the way, I don’t believe for your claim about thousands for a split-second. I wouldn’t even believe it if you had said “hundreds”. I’ll be impressed if you manage in reasonable time for “tens”.
I think he answered your question by providing an example on the spot.
I had failed to generate this as a hypothesis, but now that you bring it up, it makes the second possibility appear much more likely since it provides a possible motivation for the non-cooperativity. (This looks a bit like the conjunction fallacy, but it’s not really because possibilities that I had simply failed to think of play a role here...)
I responded to what I regarded as a ridiculous question. I’ve said enough to indicate my view of the seriousness of false confession. Do you really find it difficult to believe I could come up with countless examples of behavior that, say, you and I would agree is mildly antisocial—my neighbor’s failure to trim weeds that were partly obstructing our block’s common driveway, for one? You’re being pointless.