Y11W01VC The two systems in your head

Here's a puzzle. A bat and a ball cost $1.10 in total. The bat costs $1 more than the ball. How much does the ball cost? Most people answer quickly and get it wrong. Why? This week's article looks at two different modes of thinking that are running in your head all the time — one fast, one slow — and what happens when the wrong one answers.

Core Vocabulary

distilled

/dɪˈstɪld/|dis·tilled

verb

To reduce something complex to its most essential or concentrated form; to draw out the key meaning from a large body of information.

Word family: distil (v.), distillation (n.), distillery (n.)

Synonyms: condensed, extracted, refined

Collocations: distilled wisdom, distilled version, distilled essence

Example: The teacher distilled years of research on memory into a simple two-step study guide that every student could follow.

In the articleKahneman, who won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2002, distilled decades of research with his long-time collaborator Amos Tversky into a simple distinction he called System 1 and System 2.

interplay

/ˈɪntəpleɪ/|in·ter·play

noun

The way two or more things affect, influence, or interact with each other; the back-and-forth dynamic between forces or ideas.

Word Breakdown: inter- (prefix meaning 'between, among')

Word family: interplay (n.) — limited word family; 'interplay' does not commonly inflect further

Synonyms: interaction, dynamic, interrelation

Collocations: complex interplay, interplay between, subtle interplay

Example: Understanding the interplay between confidence and preparation helps athletes perform calmly under pressure.

In the articleOnce you know about System 1 and System 2, you start seeing their interplay everywhere.

calibrated

/ˈkælɪbreɪtɪd/|cal·i·brat·ed

adjective

Carefully adjusted to be accurate, precise, or appropriate for particular conditions or a specific purpose.

Word family: calibrate (v.), calibration (n.), recalibrate (v.)

Synonyms: adjusted, fine-tuned, accurate

Collocations: well-calibrated, finely calibrated, calibrated response

Example: A calibrated approach to feedback means adjusting the tone and level of detail to match what the student actually needs to improve.

In the articleIn most of the contexts evolution designed it for, System 1 is remarkably well-calibrated.

unitary

/ˈjuːnɪt(ə)ri/|u·ni·ta·ry

adjective

Treated or considered as a single, indivisible whole rather than as made up of separate parts.

Word Breakdown: uni- (prefix meaning 'one, single')

Word family: unit (n.), unity (n.), unite (v.)

Synonyms: singular, undivided, indivisible

Collocations: unitary system, unitary approach, unitary entity

Example: The government proposed a unitary education policy that would apply the same framework to every school in the country.

In the articleyour thinking isn't as unitary as it feels from the inside.

disinterested

/dɪsˈɪntrəstɪd/|dis·in·ter·est·ed

adjective

Impartial; free from personal bias or advantage, with no stake in the outcome. (Not the same as 'uninterested'.)

Word Breakdown: dis- (prefix meaning 'not, the opposite of')

Word family: disinterest (n.), disinterestedly (adv.)

Synonyms: impartial, neutral, unbiased

Collocations: disinterested observer, disinterested advice, disinterested judgment

Example: The mediator was carefully selected to be disinterested, ensuring neither party could claim the process was unfair.

In the articleSome of it is fast, some is slow, some is argumentative, some is disinterested.

nuanced

/ˈnjuːɑːnst/|nu·anced

adjective

Showing careful attention to subtle distinctions and fine shades of meaning; not simplified or black-and-white.

Word family: nuance (n.), nuanced (adj.)

Synonyms: subtle, refined, sophisticated

Collocations: nuanced understanding, nuanced argument, nuanced reading

Example: Her nuanced analysis of the poem went beyond the obvious meaning and uncovered layers that most other readers had missed.

In the articleThe research tradition was rich, nuanced and full of caveats long before Kahneman's book condensed it.

portable

/ˈpɔːtəb(ə)l/|por·ta·ble

adjective

Able to be easily transferred or applied across different contexts, situations, or audiences; not limited to one setting.

Word Breakdown: -able (suffix meaning 'capable of being')

Word family: portability (n.), portably (adv.)

Synonyms: transferable, adaptable, applicable

Collocations: portable skill, portable idea, portable across contexts

Example: The problem-solving approach she developed in maths proved portable — she used the same method to plan her community project.

In the articleWhat System 1 and System 2 gave it was a memorable framing — two named systems, a simple contrast, a vivid example — that made the ideas portable into ordinary conversation.

override

/ˌəʊvəˈraɪd/|o·ver·ride

verb | [override – overrode – overridden]

To set aside, cancel, or take precedence over a decision, rule, or automatic process; to step in and take control.

Word Breakdown: over- (prefix meaning 'above, surpassing, taking control of')

Word family: override (n.), overriding (adj.)

Synonyms: supersede, cancel out, take precedence over

Collocations: override a decision, override instinct, automatically override

Example: The pilot was trained to override the autopilot the moment she detected any unusual variation in the aircraft's instruments.

In the articleon the characteristics of people who are more likely to override their first impressions with deliberation.

Technical Terms

dual-process theory

/ˈdjuːəl ˈprəʊsɛs ˈθɪəri/|du·al-pro·cess the·o·ry

noun phrase

The cognitive-psychology framework that proposes human thinking operates via two interacting systems — one fast and automatic, the other slow and deliberate.

Synonyms: two-systems model, dual-processing framework

Collocations: dual-process theory proposes, within dual-process theory, dual-process framework

Example: Dual-process theory helps explain why a person can instinctively sense danger and simultaneously assess, more slowly, whether the threat is real.

In the articleThe British psychologist Jonathan Evans and others had been working on what's called dual-process theory since the 1970s.

System 1 / System 2

/ˈsɪstəm wʌn/ / /ˈsɪstəm tuː/|Sys·tem 1 / Sys·tem 2

noun phrases

Kahneman's terms for the two modes of human thinking. System 1 is fast, automatic, and effortless; System 2 is slow, deliberate, and effortful.

Synonyms: fast thinking / slow thinking, intuitive thinking / analytical thinking

Collocations: run on System 1, engage System 2, System 1 response, System 2 reasoning

Example: Quickly recognising a friend's face in a crowd is System 1; carefully reading a contract before signing it is System 2.

In the articleKahneman, who won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2002, distilled decades of research with his long-time collaborator Amos Tversky into a simple distinction he called System 1 and System 2.

heuristic

/hjʊˈrɪstɪk/|heu·ris·tic

noun

A cognitive shortcut or rule of thumb that enables quick decisions in place of full analysis; often efficient but not always accurate.

Synonyms: shortcut, rule of thumb, mental shorthand

Collocations: cognitive heuristic, apply a heuristic, simple heuristic, use a heuristic

Example: Many shoppers rely on the heuristic that a higher price signals better quality, even when that assumption does not always hold.

In the articlein many practical settings, simple heuristics that ignore most available information outperform complex analyses that try to use all of it.

recognition heuristic

/ˌrɛkəɡˈnɪʃ(ə)n hjʊˈrɪstɪk/|rec·og·ni·tion heu·ris·tic

noun phrase

Gigerenzer's cognitive rule: when choosing between options, select the one you recognise, on the basis that familiar things tend to be more significant.

Word Breakdown: -tion (suffix meaning 'the act or result of')

Synonyms: familiarity shortcut, name-recognition rule

Collocations: apply the recognition heuristic, the recognition heuristic predicts, recognition heuristic research

Example: Without realising it, voters sometimes apply the recognition heuristic and favour the candidate whose name they have already heard.

In the articleOne of Gigerenzer's favourite examples is the recognition heuristic.

motivated reasoning

/ˈməʊtɪveɪtɪd ˈriːz(ə)nɪŋ/|mo·ti·vat·ed rea·son·ing

noun phrase

Reasoning directed toward a preferred conclusion rather than toward an accurate one; thinking shaped by what a person wants to believe rather than what the evidence supports.

Synonyms: wishful thinking, conclusion-driven reasoning

Collocations: engage in motivated reasoning, prone to motivated reasoning, classic example of motivated reasoning

Example: When a student refuses to accept feedback that contradicts their self-image, they may be engaging in motivated reasoning.

In the articleMuch of what looks like motivated reasoning is actually this third system doing its normal job.

Figurative Phrases

to catch you out

To trick or expose someone by revealing an error or gap in their thinking, usually without them realising a test is happening.

Etymology/Type: Phrasal verb; idiomatic — the sense of catching an error cannot be predicted from the individual words alone.

Synonyms: trip up, expose, wrong-foot

Example: The teacher's unexpected quiz was designed to catch students out who had not been keeping up with the weekly reading.

In the articleIts point isn't to catch you out — plenty of clever people get it wrong.

run on

To operate using a particular system or mode, borrowing imagery from engines or machinery; used figuratively when something is driven by a specific kind of input.

Etymology/Type: Phrasal verb with metaphorical extension — the sense of operating using something extends from the physical idea of an engine running on a fuel.

Synonyms: operate on, function using, be driven by

Example: When you are anxious, your decision-making tends to run on emotion rather than careful logic.

In the articleMost of the time, we run on System 1 and only call in System 2 when we have to.

trip it up

To cause something to fail, stumble, or make an error; used figuratively when a system or person is forced into a mistake.

Etymology/Type: Phrasal verb; figurative extension of the physical act of causing someone to stumble or fall.

Synonyms: derail, throw off, catch out

Example: A deliberately worded question can trip up even an experienced reader who is not paying close attention.

In the articleThe contexts where it fails — the bat-and-ball puzzle, probability problems, certain artificially designed questions — are mostly contexts designed to trip it up.

hand in

To pass something across or deliver it; used here metaphorically to describe how the mind presents a ready-made answer automatically, without pausing to check it.

Etymology/Type: Phrasal verb; the literal meaning (to submit or pass over) is extended metaphorically to describe the mind's delivery of an automatic response.

Synonyms: deliver, present, pass across

Example: Before she had finished reading the problem, her mind had already handed in an answer — and she nearly missed that it was wrong.

In the articleMost people don't pause. Most people hand in System 1's answer and move on.

a mixed signal

Information or behaviour that sends contradictory messages, pointing in more than one direction and making interpretation difficult.

Etymology/Type: Noun phrase; metaphor from communication and electronics, where conflicting signals cause interference or confusion.

Synonyms: contradictory message, ambiguous sign, double message

Example: His tone was cheerful but his words were harsh — the combination sent a mixed signal that left his audience unsure how to respond.

Confusing Words

unitary vs unified

These two words look and sound similar but describe subtly different ideas — both relate to the concept of 'one', yet they apply it in different ways.

  • Something unitary is treated or considered as a single whole from the start — a government might adopt a unitary policy that makes no distinction between regions, treating the whole country as one entity.
  • Something unified has been actively brought together from separate parts to form a whole — a group of rival factions might become unified after a long period of negotiation.

If something was separate before and came together, use unified. If it was always treated as one undivided thing, use unitary.

disinterested vs uninterested

These words are among the most commonly confused in formal English — both start with a negative prefix, but they negate different things.

  • Someone who is disinterested is impartial: they have no personal stake in the outcome, making them ideal for neutral roles — a referee must be disinterested, applying the rules without favouring either side.
  • Someone who is uninterested simply does not care: they feel no curiosity or engagement with the subject — a student might be uninterested in a topic they find dull.

If you can substitute 'impartial', use disinterested. If you can substitute 'indifferent' or 'bored', use uninterested.

override vs overrule

Both words involve one thing taking precedence over another, but they are used in different contexts.

  • To override is to set aside or take control of an automatic process or mechanism — a pilot might override the autopilot, or System 2 thinking might override an instinctive System 1 reaction.
  • To overrule is to reverse a specific decision in a formal or authority-based context — a judge might overrule an objection, or a manager might overrule a team's vote.

If you are cancelling a process or mechanism, use override. If you are reversing a formal decision made by a person or body, use overrule.