If people don't reason in a Bayesian way, but they do reason, it implies there is a non-Bayesian way to reason which works (at least a fair amount, e.g. we managed to build computers and space ships). Right?
Claims that people think in an inductive way are common here. Note how my descriptions are different than that and account for the evidence.
Someone told me that humans do and must think in a bayesian way at some level b/c it's the only way that works.
As Eliezer said in Searching for Bayes-Structure:
...The way you begin to grasp the Quest for the Holy Bayes is that you learn about cognitive phenomenon XYZ, which seems really useful - and there's this bunch of philosophers who've been arguing about its true nature for centuries, and they are still arguing - and there's a bunch of AI scientists trying to make a computer do it, but they can't agree on the philosophy either -
And - Huh, that's odd! - this cognitive phenomenon didn't look anything like Bayesian on the surface, but there's this non-obvious unde