The way I tend to do it is to sit down once a week, and evaluate my current cached habits, thoughts, beliefs, roles, etc—the whole complex of factors that makes up what I perceive as “intuition” for me. I see if they are serving me well, or not. If I find they are not serving me well, I strive to change them.
Thoughts and beliefs are system II stuff. If you do X because you believe Y, that’s system II.
Intuition is often when you do things and have no reason for reasons that can’t be expressed in language as such it’s a lot harder to investigate. The kind of intuition that lets a fireman feel fear when he can’t see any logical reason and then quit the building to safe his life, can’t be broken down analytically.
I don’t see a good reason to speak in terms of system I and system II when speaking about sitting down to retrospect.
What do you mean when you say “evaluate intuition” in practical terms?
The way I tend to do it is to sit down once a week, and evaluate my current cached habits, thoughts, beliefs, roles, etc—the whole complex of factors that makes up what I perceive as “intuition” for me. I see if they are serving me well, or not. If I find they are not serving me well, I strive to change them.
Thoughts and beliefs are system II stuff. If you do X because you believe Y, that’s system II.
Intuition is often when you do things and have no reason for reasons that can’t be expressed in language as such it’s a lot harder to investigate. The kind of intuition that lets a fireman feel fear when he can’t see any logical reason and then quit the building to safe his life, can’t be broken down analytically.
I don’t see a good reason to speak in terms of system I and system II when speaking about sitting down to retrospect.