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Elegant & curated articles by Omar M Almahmoud, selected from his daily writings and reading list in life, business and self improvement. All republished articles are owned by their original authors. The articles are reblogged here under Fair Use for educational and non commercial purposes.

Confirmation Bias, Stop Wishful Thinking

It’s the result of your need for cognitive consistency. You are avalanched by new information every day from other people, the media, your experience, and many other sources. There is just too much information to process. How your mind works is that it must find means of encoding, storing, and retrieving the data you’re absorbing.

One way you do this is by developing cognitive shortcuts judging, whether this new information is useful or not. If you have to constantly evaluate your worldview, it would be exhausting, so you simply prefer to strengthen it.

Ultimately, you ignore contradictory evidence because it’s so incomprehensible to your brain. Unless, when you are held accountable by others, you become motivated to think in a critical manner, because it’s easier to accept opposing views when it concerns things you don’t care about.

“The eye sees only what the mind is prepared to comprehend.” — Robertson Davies

Unfortunately, we all have confirmation bias. Even at times when you believe you are open-minded, it’s very likely that some bias will shape your opinion in the end. It’s hard to fight this natural tendency.

Yet, if you know about confirmation bias and accept the fact that it does exist, you can make attempts to recognise it. That may help you see things from another perspective, though it’s never a guarantee.

Here are three tips I want to leave you with that I find useful:

1. How I sought information

Confirmation bias affected how I look at the world around me. Lewis Carroll once stated, “we are what we believe we are”, but it seems that the world is also what I believed it to be.

2. How I interpreted information

Confirmation bias also affected how I process neutral information into favouring my existing beliefs. Even when evidence is shown to contradict my biased view, I still interpreted it in a manner that reinforces my existing perspective.

3. How I recall memories

Confirmation bias is somewhat linked to memories. I have a liking for recalling evidence that backs up my beliefs. No matter how neutral the original information was, I fell prey to selective recall.

Why You Ignore Disconfirming Evidence

It’s the result of your need for cognitive consistency. You are avalanched by new information every day from other people, the media, your experience, and many other sources. There is just too much information to process. How your mind works is that it must find means of encoding, storing, and retrieving the data you’re absorbing.

One way you do this is by developing cognitive shortcuts judging, whether this new information is useful or not. If you have to constantly evaluate your worldview, it would be exhausting, so you simply prefer to strengthen it.

Ultimately, you ignore contradictory evidence because it’s so incomprehensible to your brain. Unless, when you are held accountable by others, you become motivated to think in a critical manner, because it’s easier to accept opposing views when it concerns things you don’t care about.

“The eye sees only what the mind is prepared to comprehend.” — Robertson Davies

So, What Now?

Unfortunately, we all have confirmation bias. Even at times when you believe you are open-minded, it’s very likely that some bias will shape your opinion in the end. It’s hard to fight this natural tendency.

Yet, if you know about confirmation bias and accept the fact that it does exist, you can make attempts to recognise it. That may help you see things from another perspective, though it’s never a guarantee.

Here are three tips I want to leave you with that I find useful:

1. Live Your Life Curiously

When you walk into every interaction trying to prove yourself right, you’re going to fall prey to confirmation bias. Don’t avoid challenging problems that might prove you being wrong, instead, actively seek learning opportunities with the risk of being wrong. When you’re willing to be wrong, you open yourself up to new insights.

So, focus less on being right and more on experiencing life with curiosity and wonder.

“The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing.” — Albert Einstein

2. Understand Disagreements

Understanding various viewpoints can help you refine your perspective. Looking for approval of your beliefs arises naturally, while it feels counterintuitive to look for evidence that contradicts your beliefs. Disagreements are far more powerful in establishing the truth and would require looking for evidence to disprove it.

“Honest disagreement is often a good sign of progress.” — Mahatma Gandhi

3. Question Your Thoughts

To fight back against cognitive biases, you need to evaluate your instinctive reactions. Looking for instances to prove that you are wrong can help you re-order your thoughts. I believe this is perhaps a true definition of self-confidence: the ability to look at the world without the need to look for instances that pleases your ego.

So, whenever you come across facts that completely confirms your worldview, stop and think about the assumptions you’re making and look from a different perspective which might prove yourself wrong.

“Most disagreements are the results of faulty assumptions.” — Geoff Tate

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This article was originally posted at https://medium.com/swlh/confirmation-bias-seeking-disconfirming-evidence-dcb7161557bf

 

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