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Patterns, Thinking, and Cognition - A Theory of Judgment (Paperback)
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Patterns, Thinking, and Cognition - A Theory of Judgment (Paperback)
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For decades, both policymakers and analysts have been frustrated by
sharp and stubborn conflicts between expert and lay perceptions on
issues of environmental risk. For example, most experts - even
those opposed to nuclear power on other grounds - would see
precautions like those now in place as adequate to protect against
risks from nuclear waste. But the public finds that very hard to
believe. Similar sharp conflicts of expert/lay intuition are
evident on a wide range of risk issues, from the safety of
bendictin as a treatment for morning sickness to the safety of
irradiation of food to destroy microorganisms. In Dealing with
Risk, Howard Margolis explores the expert/lay rift surrounding such
contentious issues and provides a provocative new account. The
usual explanation of expert/lay conflicts is that experts are
focused only on a narrow notion of risk - such as potential
fatalities - but lay intuition is concerned about a wide range of
further concerns, such as fairness and voluntariness of exposure.
Margolis argues that this rival rationalities view in a fundamental
way misses the point of these controversies, since the additional
dimensions of lay concern often are more plausibly interpreted as
reflections of lay concern than as causes. Margolis argues that
risk assessment typically involves weighing a broad range of often
complicated trade-offs between costs and benefits. As laypersons,
however, we are by definition forced to make judgments on complex
matters beyond the scope of our normal experience. Especially in
cases involving potential danger, we frequently discount nuance and
respond more viscerally. Cognitively we fall back on default
responses, all-purpose intuitionssuch as better safe than sorry or
nothing ventured, nothing gained. Such intuitions don't admit of
careful balancing of pros and cons, and lay opinion consequently
becomes polarized and at odds with the expert view.
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