A framework that applies cognitive science—psychology, neuroscience, cognitive anthropology—to understand how ordinary cognition operates in naturalistic settings. It moves beyond lab experiments to examine how people actually think, remember, decide, and reason while commuting, shopping, arguing online, or multitasking. The theory explores how cognitive processes are shaped by environment, emotion, social context, and technology, revealing that “everyday cognition” often differs dramatically from the idealized models of rationality. It emphasizes distributed cognition, situated action, and the ways minds are extended through tools and other people.
Theory of Everyday Cognitive Sciences Example: “The theory of everyday cognitive sciences showed that people’s memory for news headlines was heavily influenced by whether the headline aligned with their prior beliefs—even when they swore they were being objective.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 25, 2026
Get the Theory of Everyday Cognitive Sciences mug.A framework examining how pressures within cognitive science—neuroscience, psychology, AI, linguistics—discourage research that challenges dominant computational models, questions the universality of cognitive frameworks, or explores non-Western cognitive traditions. The chilling effect operates through funding priorities, journal gatekeeping, and the threat of being labeled “unscientific.” It explains why alternative approaches (e.g., embodied cognition, non-Western psychologies) struggle for legitimacy, and why certain findings are ignored because they don’t fit the prevailing paradigm.
Example: “A young researcher found evidence challenging a core assumption in visual perception but was told to ‘stick to incremental work’ to get tenure. Chilling Effect Theory (Cognitive Sciences) explains how paradigms protect themselves.”
by Abzugal March 27, 2026
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The feeling in your heart that in the CIA has never actually done anything wrong, and that anyone who says they have is a conspiracy theorist.
"Mark still doesn't believe that MK Ultra was a real CIA operation, despite the CIA having confirmed the program's existence and having published information about it to the public."
"That's crazy. He must have CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance."
"That's crazy. He must have CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance."
by Allen Michael Ratcliffe Dulles August 2, 2025
Get the CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance mug.The feeling in your heart that the CIA has never actually done anything wrong, despite mountains of evidence that says otherwise
"You still don't believe that MK Ultra happened, even though the CIA publicly admitted to the program being real, and released documents detailing how it was carried out?"
"No dude, that stuff is too crazy to have ever actually happened."
"Wow. You must have CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance."
"No dude, that stuff is too crazy to have ever actually happened."
"Wow. You must have CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance."
by Allen Michael Ratcliffe Dulles August 2, 2025
Get the CIA-Induced Cognitive Dissonance mug.saying, smelling or describing salt or a salty food or substance around a person with saltric verbal coughing syndrome can cause the person to cough aggressively and or worse, led them to loss of voice and moaning aggressively.
by yunarns October 21, 2025
Get the saltric verbal coughing syndrome mug.The meta-problem of self-reference: Cognitive sciences (psychology, neuroscience, linguistics) use the human mind to study the human mind. This creates a loop where the instrument of investigation is the same as the object under investigation. The hard problem is that any model the mind produces about itself is necessarily incomplete and shaped by the very cognitive biases, limitations, and structures it's trying to map. It's like a camera trying to take a perfect picture of its own lens—the act of observation changes and is constrained by the apparatus. We can never get a "view from outside" of cognition.
Example: A neuroscientist uses an fMRI machine (designed and operated by human brains) to study which brain regions activate during decision-making. The conclusions of the study are then processed, understood, and believed by other human brains. The hard problem: The entire epistemic chain is made of "brain stuff." If human cognition is systematically flawed in some way, that flaw would be baked into the scientific methods, instruments, and interpretations, making it invisible to us. We are using a potentially faulty compiler to debug its own source code. Hard Problem of Cognitive Sciences.
by Enkigal January 24, 2026
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