There are a number of other possible explanations for that detail. For example:
So, design a better test. What prompt would activate the System 1 you describe as ‘keep your head down, do what you’re told, they must know what they’re doing’ and not activate System 2, like the “You have no other choice” statement?
The claim made by the OP is “if people believe in what they’re doing, they will hurt people;” the claim made by nigerweiss is “if people use system 1 thinking, they will hurt people.” To differentiate between them, we need a statement intended to make people use system 1 thinking without relying on them believing what they are doing.
It’s not clear to me that nigerweiss’s division is more precise than the OP’s division, or has significant predictive accuracy. I would have expected “you have no other choice” to evoke ‘keep your head down, do what you’re told, they must know what they’re doing’; that is, the system 1 thinking that nigerweiss claims would lead people to push the button, when it led to less people pushing the button. Why is it a status attack that awakens system 2 (huh?), except because we know what we need to predict?
So, design a better test. What prompt would activate the System 1 you describe as ‘keep your head down, do what you’re told, they must know what they’re doing’ and not activate System 2, like the “You have no other choice” statement?
I think nigerweiss is asserting that “The experiment requires that you continue” activates System 1 but not System 2.
The claim made by the OP is “if people believe in what they’re doing, they will hurt people;” the claim made by nigerweiss is “if people use system 1 thinking, they will hurt people.” To differentiate between them, we need a statement intended to make people use system 1 thinking without relying on them believing what they are doing.
It’s not clear to me that nigerweiss’s division is more precise than the OP’s division, or has significant predictive accuracy. I would have expected “you have no other choice” to evoke ‘keep your head down, do what you’re told, they must know what they’re doing’; that is, the system 1 thinking that nigerweiss claims would lead people to push the button, when it led to less people pushing the button. Why is it a status attack that awakens system 2 (huh?), except because we know what we need to predict?