I saw this handy little chart which outlines some of the common biases that humans make while thinking, debating, and forming opinions; not bad things to be aware of while evaluating the legitimacy of thoughts and beliefs. (20 Cognitive Biases That Affect Your Decisions)
I worry about some of these, but Outcome bias seems to hit home. It's like, if I become so totally open minded that my conscience gets sort of buried, then I begin to make decisions based on outcomes with less consideration to how ethical it is to do all the things on the way to getting there. I guess that doesn't make much sense... Lol. What I mean is i think we can become too open minded, such that we make bad decisions, as with outcome bias.
Like when you called me intolerant because I didn't agree with changing the Apu character in Simpsons.
Seconded. I'm probably going to find a way to print this out and study it for a few days. Seems like a great chart to better myself and produce better arguments for work / social conflicts. Nice to know how decisions are made .
i'm not sure if #10 is based on # 1, 3, or 8. but either way, it's a misconception since ostriches don't actually bury their heads in the sand. but then, this post may just be an example of #15.
Yep. Ever since I learned of "confirmation bias" I believe I have learned to avoid it in my google searches.
The only reason was because I said getting rid of Apu is not a solution to anything and you said if the character doesn't change for the better (less offensive) getting rid of him is preferable. I disagreed and you found that a sign of being intolerant of the indian american minority. I then pointed out you were actually the one displaying intolerance, namely against controversial/offensive characters in comedy (and/or pop culture in general).