Curiosity Chronicle

Dangerous Mental Errors (You Don't Know You're Making)


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Today at a Glance:

Cognitive biases and logical fallacies are systematic errors in thinking and reasoning that negatively impact decision-making quality, logic, and outcomes.

Combatting them relies first and foremost on establishing a level of awareness—both academically and practically.

Part I of this series covered Fundamental Attribution Error, Naïve Realism, the Curse of Knowledge, Availability Bias, and Survivorship Bias.

Today’s Part II covers Loss Aversion, the Spotlight Effect, Heaven’s Reward Fallacy, Confirmation Bias, and Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon.

Dangerous Mental Errors

A few weeks ago, I shared Part I of a multi-part series on cognitive biases and logical fallacies.

In the opening to the piece, I commented on the fascinating dichotomy of our species:

We possess the capacity to accomplish some complex feat of technology and engineering, and subsequently fall victim to the most obviously flawed base logic. For a hyper-intelligent species, our thinking and decision-making patterns can be pretty fractured.

To be sure, many of these fractures were—for much of human history—features, not bugs. It’s logical to surmise that they were hardwired into our DNA because they made it incrementally more likely that we would survive to reproductive age.

But the facts on the ground have changed—we live in a Digital Age—and our thinking and reasoning pathways have not had enough time to “catch up” to those new realities.

So, we have to force it—we have to fight back and regain control over the quality of our decision-making and logic.

In today’s Part II of the multi-part series, I’ll cover five common cognitive biases and logical fallacies that negatively impact decision-making quality, logic, and outcomes. To really bring it to life, for each one, I’ll provide a definition, example, and perspectives on how to fight back.

Without further ado, let’s dive in…

Loss Aversion

Definition

The pain of losing something is more powerful than the pleasure of winning it.

Loss aversion was first identified by famed behavioral scientists Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, who found that humans had a tendency to prefer avoiding losses over acquiring equivalent gains.

Accordingly, people were typically willing to take actions to avoid losses that they wouldn’t have taken to seek gains.

Economists had previously assumed humans were rational actors—that $100 in losses would drive the same amount of pain as $100 in gains would create pleasure. Wrong. Humans are enigmatic creatures!

Example

Investors—professional and amateur alike—provide some of the most clear, trackable examples of loss aversion. The pain and fear of realizing a loss often leads investors to hold onto losing positions much longer than they should.

The media contributes to this bias—dunking on investors who cut ties with losing positions rather than celebrating the fact that they may have exhibited clear, rational thinking.

How to Fight Back

Avoid emotional connection to your possessions—whether they are investments, material items, or money. Attempt to distance your emotions from the decision-making process where possible.

Ask questions:

Am I being objective and rational in this decision?

Am I too connected emotionally to make a rational decision?

If you are too connected to a given decision, you may need to outsource it to an objective third-party.

The Spotlight Effect

Definition

Humans significantly overestimate the degree to which other people are noticing or observing our appearance or actions.

It causes a lot of social anxiety—it keeps people from being themselves due to an irrational fear of judgement.

We incorrectly assume that others are thinking about us. The reality: Everyone is just thinking about themselves.

Example

Imagine you go to a dinner party. You’re nervous about the party, because you know there will be a lot of smart attendees and you won’t know anyone there.

During the cocktail hour, you’re in a small group discussion and say something incorrect about the current state of domestic economic affairs. Your error is pointed out politely and the conversation moves on in a different direction.

The conversation has moved on—but you haven’t. Your brain is swirling around the moment where your error was pointed out.

Your internal dialogue turns negative: “Everyone thinks I’m an idiot. They’re all staring at me. I wish I could leave.”

For the rest of the event, you feel self-conscious and distant, worried about making another mistake.

How to Fight Back

It sounds morbid, but constantly remind yourself that no one *really* cares about you. No one is obsessing over your hits and misses as much as you are. Full stop.

Life is scary and complex—everyone is just trying to make their own way through it.

It's liberating to realize that most people don't really think about you…

Heaven’s Reward Fallacy

Definition

Humans tend to have an expectation that they will be be justly rewarded and praised for all of their hard work and sacrifice.

The reality is that a lot of our efforts go unnoticed, particularly early in our careers. Much of the work is thankless.

This is a dangerous error because the constant expectation of external affirmation simply breeds resentment when it doesn’t come.

Example

Early in your career—or really at any point in your career—you often have to sacrifice greatly for the benefit of the team or organization.

The expectation that these actions will have an equal and opposite reaction—in the form of promotions, compensation, or praise—is unfortunately misguided.

It leads to disappointment and resentment and is an underlying cause of a lot of employee churn and retention issues.

How to Fight Back

There are two sides to this:

As an individual, detach inputs from outputs. Design your own rewards for your hard work and sacrifice. Give yourself a...
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Curiosity ChronicleBy Sahil Bloom

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