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by coldtea
102 days ago
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People in everyday life are not evaluating rules. They evaluate cases, for whether a case fits a rule. So, when being told: "Which card(s) must you turn over in order to test that if a card shows an even number on one face, then its opposite face is blue?" they translate it to: "Check the cards that show an even number on one face to see whether their opposite face is blue and vice versa" Based on this, many would naturally pick the blue card (to test the direct case), and the 8 card (to test the "vice versa" case). They wont check the red to see if there's an odd number there that invalidates the formulation as a general rule, because they're not in the mindset of testing a general rule. Would they do the same if they had more familiarity with rule validation in everyday life or if the had a more verbose and explicit explanation of the goal? |
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