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The dangerous practice of thinking

N C Boreham1

  • 1Research and Graduate School, Faculty of Education, University of Manchester, UK.

Medical Education
|May 1, 1994
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Skilled thinking primarily relies on the implicit memory system, not conscious thought. Direct experience, not classroom learning, develops this crucial implicit system for effective adaptation.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Information Processing Theory

Background:

  • Thinking is viewed as adapting activity to environmental inputs.
  • A dual cognitive structure, explicit and implicit memory systems, is proposed to explain this adaptation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explain cognitive adaptation through a dual memory system.
  • To highlight the dominant role of the implicit memory system in skilled thinking.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical framework proposing dual cognitive structure (explicit and implicit memory).
  • Analysis of the functional roles of explicit and implicit memory systems in thinking.

Main Results:

  • The implicit memory system, inaccessible to consciousness, dominates skilled thinking.

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  • The explicit memory system, accessible to consciousness, primarily regulates novel situations.
  • Implicit memory develops mainly through direct experience, independent of conscious processing.
  • Conclusions:

    • Skilled thinking is predominantly driven by the unconscious implicit memory system.
    • The explicit memory system serves a regulatory role, especially in novel situations.
    • Medical science's relevance to practical decision-making is uncertain due to unknown effects on implicit memory, yet it should be taught for regulation.