Sota: We are not very good at assessing our own selves. Is it just a glitch or a bug in the system? Or what is your take on on that prorspectiveha, mi take is that, a, i've a couple of diferent takes. But but the second point is just noting how difficult this task is. That if you sit down and say, why dont people know themselves? You begin to realize that there are some really big barriersto knowing yourself. And those barriers are so big that evolution is not tough enough to be able to defeat them. Sota: If you talk to other people, they can be sources of invaluable insight into yourself
In this episode, we explore why we are unaware that we lack the skill to tell how unskilled and unaware we are.
The evidence gathered so far by psychologists and neuroscientists seems to suggest that each one of us has a relationship with our own ignorance, a dishonest, complicated relationship, and that dishonesty keeps us sane, happy, and willing to get out of bed in the morning. Part of that ignorance is a blind spot we each possess that obscures both our competence and incompetence called the Dunning-Kruger Effect.
It's a psychological phenomenon that arises sometimes in your life because you are generally very bad at self-assessment. If you have ever been confronted with the fact that you were in over your head, or that you had no idea what you were doing, or that you thought you were more skilled at something than you actually were – then you may have experienced this effect. It is very easy to be both unskilled and unaware of it, and in this episode we explore why that is with professor David Dunning, one of the researchers who coined the term and a scientist who continues to add to our understanding of the phenomenon.
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