FEELING AND THINKING ABOUT THE FUTURE:
OFFLINE METACOGNITION IN DECISION-MAKING
Toma Strle http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5751-6831
University of Ljubljana - Faculty of EducationLjubljana, Slovenia
INDECS 14(4), 331-343, 2016 DOI 10.7906/indecs.14.4.1 Full text available here. |
Received: 4th October 2016. |
ABSTRACT
In the article, I will argue that metacognition plays an important role in decision-making not only
as direct online monitoring and control of decision-making processes but also by enabling us to influence our decisions and
actions - and mental states and processes, related to them - in an offline manner. That is, offline metacognition allows
us to observe, refer to and, to a certain degree, exert influence on mental states and processes related to our decisions and
actions in the way of being removed, decoupled from the task/decision at hand and present time demands. As such, it enables us to
observe, form thoughts and have feelings about mental states and processes directly related to our future decisions, to
plan our future decisions, to reflect on our past choices, and to think and have feelings about our broader goals, desires, and
personal values that are indirectly related to our decisions.
To illustrate the importance of offline metacognition in decision-making, I will firstly review and discuss some experimental
findings on implementation intentions ("decisions about the future") and anticipated emotions (beliefs about future emotional
states related to outcomes of our decisions). Secondly, I will argue that our ability to reflect (think and feel) on our broader
goals, desires and personal values - that represent a kind of structure into which our specific decisions are embedded - reveals
how offline metacognition can exert influence on our decisions also in an indirect way. All in all, I will try to show that our
ability to refer to our own minds in an offline way - be it to mental states and processes directly or indirectly related to
specific decisions - is essential for us to decide, as we decide, and act, as we act.
KEY WORDS
anticipated emotions, decision-making, goals, implementation intentions, offline metacognition
CLASSIFICATION
APA: 2340, 2380, 2630
JEL: D81, D83, Z19