You are viewing revision 1.22.0, last edited by Halfwit

A cached thought is an answer that was arrived at by recalling a previously-computed conclusion, rather than performing the reasoning from scratch.

Cached thoughts can be useful in saving computational resources at the cost of some memory load, and also at the risk of maintaining a belief long past the point when evidence should force an update. In particular, cached thoughts can result in a lack of creative approaches to problem-solving, as cached solutions may hinder if novelty is necessary.

What is generally called common sense is more or less a collection of cached thoughts....

(Read More)