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System 1 Thinking vs System 2 Thinking
Daniel Kahneman's dual-process theory divides thinking into two systems: System 1 is fast, intuitive, and automatic. System 2 is slow, deliberate, and analytical. Most cognitive biases arise from System 1 making judgments that System 2 fails to check.
Key Differences
| Dimension | System 1 Thinking | System 2 Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | Fast and automatic | Slow and effortful |
| Awareness | Operates below conscious awareness | Requires conscious attention |
| Effort | Low effort — runs on autopilot | High effort — drains mental energy |
| Accuracy | Often accurate, but prone to systematic biases | More accurate when engaged, but often lazy |
| Capacity | High throughput — handles many inputs simultaneously | Limited — can only focus on one complex task at a time |
When to use System 1 Thinking
- Routine decisions with familiar patterns
- Situations requiring immediate response
- When cognitive load is already high and you need to conserve energy
When to use System 2 Thinking
- High-stakes decisions with long-term consequences
- When your initial intuition contradicts the evidence
- Complex problems requiring mathematical or logical reasoning
- When you suspect a cognitive bias is influencing your judgment
Frequently Asked Questions
What is System 1 vs System 2 thinking?
System 1 is fast, intuitive thinking — the kind you use when driving a familiar route or recognising a friend's face. System 2 is slow, deliberate thinking — the kind you use when solving a complex math problem or weighing a major decision. The framework comes from Daniel Kahneman's book 'Thinking, Fast and Slow'.
Why does System 1 thinking cause errors?
System 1 uses mental shortcuts (heuristics) that are usually helpful but can produce systematic errors. For example, it relies heavily on what's easily available in memory (availability bias) and on initial anchors (anchoring bias), leading to predictably irrational judgments.