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  • Intuition pumps are sometimes called thought experiments. More often they're called thought

  • experiments. But they're not really formal arguments typically. They're stories. They're

  • little fables. In fact, I think they're similar to Aesop's fables in that they're supposed

  • to have a moral. They're supposed to teach us something. And what they do is they lead

  • the audience to an intuition, a conclusion, where you sort of pound your fist on the table

  • and you say, "Oh yeah, it's gotta be that way, doesn't it." And if it achieves that

  • then it's pumped the intuition that was designed to pump. These are persuasion machines. Little

  • persuasion machines that philosophers have been using for several thousand years.

  • I think that intuition pumps are particularly valuable when there's confusion about just

  • what the right questions are and what the right -- what matters. What matters to answer

  • the question. I think we're all pretty good at using examples to think about things and

  • intuition pumps are usually rather vivid examples from which you're supposed to draw a very

  • general moral. And they come up in many walks of life. Anytime you're puzzled or confused

  • about what to do next or whether something's true or false, you might cast about for an

  • intuition pump that could help you.

  • When I first coined the term intuition pump, that's when Doug Hofstadter and I were working

  • on the Mind's Eye which has lots of intuition pumps, lots of thought experiments in it.

  • And Doug came up with a great metaphor. He said, "What you want to do with any of these

  • intuition pumps is twiddle all the knobs. Turn the knobs, see what makes it work." Now

  • this is actually something that we're familiar with from other parts of our lives. If there's

  • a gadget and you want to know what it does, turn the knobs, see what happens, see what

  • the moving parts do. So I encourage everybody to not just to take an intuition pump as it's

  • handed to them but look at the moving parts. See what makes it tick. Try to figure out

  • what if I adjust this, will it still pump the same intuition? Will it still yield the

  • same punitive conclusion or will the whole thing fall apart?

  • And it's interesting to see that a lot of times philosophers will make an intuition

  • pump which seems to do great work until you start turning the knobs and then you realize

  • that it actually depends on your not thinking clearly about some aspect of the problem.

  • Then you expose it as not a good intuition pump but as actually a sort of negative one.

  • I call them boom crutches because they explode

  • in your face.

Intuition pumps are sometimes called thought experiments. More often they're called thought

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