| Escape from Your Shawshank (ii): The benevolent see of the beholder? From visual illusion to biased notes |
0. However, almost every time our brains can find the most reliable explanation from the rich ambiguity of the information, make a point estimate of the incomparable cow B. 1, a priori hypothesis is a double-edged sword, the other side of its blade is what we often say "prejudice." 2, for the daily life of events, there is always an ordinary explanation, and a crazy explanation. 3. The only way to break this prejudice is to broaden your horizons, accumulate more knowledge, and discuss with people with different knowledge backgrounds, or even hold the belief that I may be wrong, and you don't know how to falsify a guess. 4. "This is only an explanation (possible), not necessarily the only explanation (possibly)." (There is no other explanation that doesn't mean there is no other explanation). "
| Escape from Your Shawshank (iii): Meet your own notes 200,000 years ago |
0, because the human brain is through the long evolutionary years "piled up." 1. Ordinary people are also often troubled-knowing that the right thing is impossible to do. 2, we often lament that "it is easier said than done". The most painful thing in the world is not to fight with others, but to fight with yourself. 3. The principle of GTD is exactly the same: by providing continuous progress that allows the performer to realize that things are moving towards completion, the positive emotions of this positive trend can further motivate the individual to carry out the matter. 4. God gave us a primitive brain, but also renewed our new cortex, whether or not to be kidnapped 200,000 years ago, depending on whether you recognize the evolutionary history of the brain, and the correct use of your rational brain.
| Escape from Your Shawshank (iv): Reason and emotion notes |
0, we know the answer, but often do not know the real solution to the thinking process. 1. The real reason is sometimes hidden in the place where the consciousness is not reached, controlled by our emotional brain, and when it directs our emotional brain to make a decision, we send a red-headed to inform our rational brain, and our rational brain then as described in the experiment mentioned in the beginning of the article, Quickly and decisively give all sorts of plausible explanations that make our decisions and actions look flawless. 2. As long as our emotional brain first identified one thing, our poor rational thinking would easily succumb to the orders of the emotional brain-explaining things to their own direction. 3, as long as one thing still exists to their own advantage of the explanation, our brains will not hesitate to deceiving that it is the only explanation. 4, as long as an explanation is to their advantage, we do not want to go to the scrutiny and rebuttal, and then the flawed things seem not to be possible, and as long as an explanation is possible, we believe that it must be, a strong emotional brain will prevent the rational brain to go deep thinking. In the case of an unfavorable interpretation of ourselves, we either ignore it, or we will scrutinize it in an unusually careful way, seizing a loophole and believing that the explanation has been completely overturned. 5. Each of us has a thought stamp in our brains. This seal is built from experience and is maintained with self-esteem, unbreakable, and higher than the hardness of a diamond. 6. Social Psychology studies have found that we do not look at the evidence that is good for us, and that the evidence against ourselves is a dead end, and we tend to be hard-working to gather favorable evidence and ignore unfavorable evidence. The truth is, when the balance of our hearts has already been tilted, it seems that the absurd reason has become brilliant, and other people's reasonable rebuttal can be plucked out of the "fatal" loophole. 7. Objectivity implies the possibility of acknowledging the existence of unknown information, and rationality means being able to see problems and thoughts from the opposite perspective. Learn to question your judgments, rather than let others point out their mistakes, try to find their own mistakes. 8, the habit is difficult to change, is because the habit is self-reinforcing, the more use stronger, the stronger the more use. If you want to jump out of existing habits, you must rely on the external forces-the knowledge of the psychological mechanism. 9, many times we can not self-control because the emotional brain does not know and do not admit that this thing is wrong. Escape from Your Shawshank (ii): The benevolent see of the beholder? From visual illusion to prejudice escape from your Shawshank (iii): Meet 200,000 years ago yourself escape from your Shawshank (iv): Reason and emotion
Escape from Your Shawshank (ii) (iii) (IV)