Oh... in that case I think you're using subconscious in rather a different sense to me. I mean it in the sense of my emotional reactions, which I see as the part of me that sets the goals my conscious mind then strives to achieve. I think you're using it to refer to the parts of your (originally conscious) thought processes which have become elided into "this is clearly the right answer" shorthands. I suspect that if you wanted to find out about that you'd need to look at the things you design and abstract from these concrete examples the general principles your mind is operating on. They will be there - you're not Captain Overview like I am, but your brain has the ability to create systems-for-understanding-with just the same as mine does.
I mean it in the sense of my emotional reactions, which I see as the part of me that sets the goals my conscious mind then strives to achieve. I think you're using it to refer to the parts of your (originally conscious) thought processes which have become elided into "this is clearly the right answer" shorthands.
I am, but on the other hand the more I inhabit my own brain the more I become convinced that the two parts of the brain you distinguish here are actually largely the same. Trauma, for example - now there's something which is obviously the province of a psychiatrist, and fairly clearly connected to the emotional-reactions concept you describe. You become traumatised when some really horrible thing happens to you in connection with <foo>, and thereafter you have trouble whenever you encounter <foo> because your subconscious has learned to associate <foo> with all manner of bad stuff. But the faculties required for it to learn and generate this behaviour are precisely the same as those required for it to learn to juggle, look three moves ahead in a chess game, solve Net puzzles with barely any conscious thought or stamp on the brake in a car at the first sign of danger. It's all just pattern-matching: picking a complex stimulus out of the surrounding context, recognising it to be similar to something we've seen before, and either suggesting the same response as worked last time, or suggesting avoiding the response that didn't.
the more I inhabit my own brain the more I become convinced that the two parts of the brain you distinguish here are actually largely the same
They may well be for you but they aren't for me in the slightest. There's my emotions and then there's my pattern-matching/learning brain, and while the pattern-matcher does feed data into my emotional brain, the emotional brain is very selective about what stimuli it pays any attention to and very slow to change its idea of preset patterns that absolutely need to be responded to, however different the current context is - all this cliched psychoanalysis stuff you hear about responding to people as if they're one of your parents is actually perfectly true, it's just that it only becomes a problem when you have duff parents!
I am, but on the other hand the more I inhabit my own brain the more I become convinced that the two parts of the brain you distinguish here are actually largely the same. Trauma, for example - now there's something which is obviously the province of a psychiatrist, and fairly clearly connected to the emotional-reactions concept you describe. You become traumatised when some really horrible thing happens to you in connection with <foo>, and thereafter you have trouble whenever you encounter <foo> because your subconscious has learned to associate <foo> with all manner of bad stuff. But the faculties required for it to learn and generate this behaviour are precisely the same as those required for it to learn to juggle, look three moves ahead in a chess game, solve Net puzzles with barely any conscious thought or stamp on the brake in a car at the first sign of danger. It's all just pattern-matching: picking a complex stimulus out of the surrounding context, recognising it to be similar to something we've seen before, and either suggesting the same response as worked last time, or suggesting avoiding the response that didn't.
They may well be for you but they aren't for me in the slightest. There's my emotions and then there's my pattern-matching/learning brain, and while the pattern-matcher does feed data into my emotional brain, the emotional brain is very selective about what stimuli it pays any attention to and very slow to change its idea of preset patterns that absolutely need to be responded to, however different the current context is - all this cliched psychoanalysis stuff you hear about responding to people as if they're one of your parents is actually perfectly true, it's just that it only becomes a problem when you have duff parents!