no subject
21 Sep 2003 10:39 pmUnskilled and Unaware of It: How Difficulties in Recognizing One's Own Incompetence Lead to Inflated Self-Assessments
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I collected a quote from the SF Chronicle about this (or a similar) study a while back, and the notion helped me understand vast landscapes of human behavior:
(via
I collected a quote from the SF Chronicle about this (or a similar) study a while back, and the notion helped me understand vast landscapes of human behavior:
One reason that the ignorant also tend to be the blissfully self-assured...is that the skills required for competence often are the same skills necessary to recognize competence. -- San Francisco Chronicle, 1-18-00The study has some problems (e.g., I still don't think you can meaningfully rate whether someone is competent at humor, because that's so subjective), but overall it's fascinating.
no subject
Date: 22 Sep 2003 04:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 22 Sep 2003 09:22 am (UTC)"Uncomfortably" because I just don't understand why it isn't obvious to everyone else.
I think Martin Seligman may have part of the answer (as I suspect you know, one of his ongoing studies is of depression vs. optimism, and he declares that non-depressed people exhibit a mild psychosis of optimism).
no subject
Date: 22 Sep 2003 10:25 am (UTC)I've definitely internalized the "pride goeth before a fall" idea, and this plays right into that.
great link
Date: 22 Sep 2003 10:42 am (UTC)I couldn't comment on a couple of your last posts for some reason(was logged in), and am glad I can do so now.
Re: great link
Date: 22 Sep 2003 10:45 am (UTC)