Hi Légu, welcome to the forum and thank you for the very interesting post!
I like the types of thought experiments you're doing. We've arrived at similar confusions about a few things.
Right now I'm in a school / meditation group where we practice self observation in a variety of ways... we see this as "collecting material" which is required for a higher form of processing. There are some concepts which, early in my practice, I was asked to consider. My self-observation exercises tended to confirm these -- which I take with a grain of salt ("what the thinker thinks, the prover proves" -Robert Anton Wilson, "The Law of 5s is never wrong" -Mal&Omar), but perhaps sharing my own experiences may be useful.
This makes me wonder - what are the implications of differences in thought production? Can one type be better, more efficient?
I think the different kinds of processing have different specialties & different blind spots.
In a horse & carriage, which is most important: the wheels, the horse, or the driver?
none of them, really
The fastest horse in the world is useless, actually problematic, if the other factors are not in line.
I've discovered that without the need for forming sentences and articulating them, thoughts form much quicker. Whereas before the act of thinking was like a stream, without language it becomes more like waves of ideas with pauses between each thought. I do not yet know if this pause can eradicated with more practice. If it can, this could mean thinking can be incredibly quick. For now, unsymbolic thinking is more akin to meditation. Without the extra attention being paid to producing sentences, my focus goes elsewhere - usually my breath.
similar observations here -- language is SLOW, other types of thoughts are much quicker.
Do you feel like you have control over this stream?
What I call meditation is not DOING this kind of thinking, but OBSERVING it, recognizing that it's always happening, it's just coming from me on autopilot. Usually these experiences underpin the verbal/linguistic thoughts I have.
Like for example, somebody says "do you want to go to the beach?", or "Do you think schools will reopen?"
there is a little cascade of mental activity that preceeds my answer. I am not usually aware of this, I'm generally just conscious of my verbal response, and a sort of vague feeling which informs it. If I'm asked to elaborate, I will be concocting explanations of this process -- which might not really capture it, sometimes they are arbitrary.
Another possible implication I considered was whether unsymbolic thought is possibly less biased than dialogue. I use bias fairly loosely, meaning the filters we apply to our thoughts and our judgement of them. It occurs to me that the medium of thought might dictate the logic of thought itself. That is, language is inherently rhetoric. By definition, it is intended to transfer ideas, not necessarily to understand or produce them. By continuously converting thought into language, I found that I'm persuading myself or an imaginary opponent. If this is so, then the ideas no longer are judged (internally) by how correct or logical they are, but rather by how persuasive they are. Hence the bias.
I think that language is made of associations. Therefore, linguistic-logic is biased by them.
Language is necessary, I think, for certain kinds of complex thought. How does a microprocessor work? I can't conceive of a way to understand this in a non-verbal way. Once you have sufficient verbal-mastery, you can develop abstractions, which may operate differently than the thoughts -- for example, there are operations I do at work which are very complicated, but I can do without really thinking about - partly because of familiarity. It's interesting, sometimes I'll notice that I'm doing something very complex on autopilot, and my linguistic-brain isn't really connected to it... if you were to ask me what I was doing at that moment, it would take me a second to index it before I could respond verbally.
But I couldn't have arrived at that level of abstraction without the verbal understanding of the system.
Through some observation, I came to the conclusion that thought is produced subconsciously and that we interpret and process what comes up. Interestingly, it seems to me that this super-consciousness is almost like a separate entity that has little communication with the self. Of course, I cannot distinguish whether it's completely separate or merely a deeper part of my own self.
Can you talk a little bit more about the super-consciousness?
and finally, from the beginning of your post....
I'll be mostly ignoring the other types of thought, only because I use them far less often.
I will share this:
the people who are teaching me these self-observation techniques have warned against putting that mind on a throne.
The verbal-logical [prefrontal cortex] mind is strong, for many of us it's also very loud.
In some ways, this is not a strength, but a weakness.
I view the self as having three "brains", three different types of processing
The Intellectual Brain
The Emotional Brain
The Moving Brain (this incorporates both physical sensations in the body such as hunger or tiredness as well as spacial logic-- ie how do I get from A to B)
These three processors work independently. SOMETIMES, they share data. OFTEN, they do not.
My verbal-logical-brain is often badly disconnected from my emotional processing.
Frequently, I have an emotion about something, I'm not even really aware of it, but my linguistic-brain becomes slave to that emotion, concoction rationales and explanations which serve it.
Or sometimes I'm just HUNGRY, and that creates a kind of stress in my nervous system that affects my emotions and logic. But I don't know that I'm hungry, because that intellect-brain is not getting data from the body-brain, but my intellect-brain is driving.
I think that being a better thinker is NOT about honing the intellect to its finest, most precise edge, and using it all the time.
I think it's about connecting these systems that we generally exclude.
sorry for the run-on post! you got me thinking!