Excellent article, but it doesn't apply to me 🤣🤣
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Linda From Maine wrote:
Excellent article, but it doesn't apply to me 🤣🤣
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You know better and I see the Smilies. Our brains are loaded with instinct and the mind plays tricks that we do not even understand. Even our memories are readjusted and changed over the years, yes we have incorrect memories.
Functional Fixedness seems like it would be an excellent mental exercise:
In a 2012 study, participants were trained in a two-step process known as generic parts technique. The first step: list an object’s (or a problem’s) parts. The second step: uncouple the part from its known use. The classic example is to break a candle into wax and wick. Next, uncouple wick from how it works in the candle, describing it instead as string, which opens new possibilities for its use. Study participants who used this method solved 67 percent more problems than people who did not use it.
Apparently most of you are suffering from Dunning Kruger syndrome. A read of the info could uncover some of what you do not now.
JohnFrim
Loc: Somewhere in the Great White North.
Good article. I am surprised, however, that in the part on self-serving bias they did not cite DJT as a prime example of someone chronically afflicted by this trait.
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