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Sean I's avatar

Looking forward to your exploration of these issues.

I have often wondered about the aircraft example. Sometimes, I have thought it might reflect what you could call destiny-control bias. This bias means that we tend to give more credence to things that leave us in control of our destiny than things that do not (driving a car v being a passenger in an aircraft piloted by someone you have never met).

I wonder also whether you need to consider risk tolerance as an external variable affecting 'expressed' credence. In your apple example, the different decisions could be explained by how willing a person is to suffer negative consequences (the apple has a worm or tastes bad) rather than the inherent credence they give to the apple being ok.

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