quadraginta
Becoming Beth
Seems to be deliberate misunderstanding of what I typed.
Oh,I understood just fine.
When you believe something first, and then select things which support your beliefs ... that's 'rational'. When someone else does the same thing to support beliefs you disagree with ...that's rationalizing.
There is nothing wrong with looking for evidence to support your instincts. This is how science works. It's when you fail to find evidence and then invent the facts you need, that it becomes confirmation bias.
Um, no. That's not quite what confirmation bias is. Just for starters, something doesn't "become" confirmation bias. It either is, or it isn't.
'Inventing the facts you need' isn't confirmation bias, either. That's called 'lying' in many circles.
"Looking for evidence to support your instincts.", OTOH, is confirmation bias.
It isn't "how science works", though.
A scientist will collect data. He may (or may not) develop a hypothesis in the course of that data collection. If a hypothesis should be developed he may test it. The best way to do that is to try to find data or make predictions which do not support the hypothesis. Merely searching for more data which is in agreement with the hypothesis is one of the most fundamental forms of confirmation bias. Almost, but not quite as fundamental as beginning with the conclusion.
In my example of the kitchen knife, the pro-innocence side naturally suspects contamination;
<snip>
"Naturally".

No confirmation bias here. Right?
To paraphrase a worthy quote, I don't think those words mean what you think they mean.