Category: Human Behavior and Cognitive Science

  • Because once they are in the real world they will always and everywhere revert t

    Because once they are in the real world they will always and everywhere revert to type – hence why your ancestors and mine sought to give them enough MANNERS to get prestige jobs young. This is how we ‘buy’ positions for our children. So the half-life of your parenting is short.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-10 17:11:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215682586053369857

    Reply addressees: @ChangKelong @DegenRolf

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215591788918067201


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    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215591788918067201

  • WHY ARE CHILDREN IN THE SAME FAMILY SO DIFFERENT? (80% nature 20% idiosyncratic

    WHY ARE CHILDREN IN THE SAME FAMILY SO DIFFERENT?
    (80% nature 20% idiosyncratic experience)
    “Do no harm” to your children. Do not try to mould them into ideals. Have six kids and you can’t screw them up by burying them in your fantasies. Have one or two and you easily will. https://twitter.com/DegenRolf/status/1215592935384932352

  • Again: if parenting was that influential we couldn’t exist. Instead, parents pri

    Again: if parenting was that influential we couldn’t exist. Instead, parents primary control is ONLY who they mate with, and while you can’t make your kids ‘better’ you can do them harm. So in parenting, as in ethics, DO NO WRONG is far more important than trying to do right. https://twitter.com/DegenRolf/status/1215526716900331520

  • WISDOM LEARNED AND WISDOM EARNED: WE ARE SELF DOMESTICATING —“The hardest thin

    WISDOM LEARNED AND WISDOM EARNED: WE ARE SELF DOMESTICATING

    —“The hardest thing over the last few years I’ve had to come to accept has had to be be the proposition that “we are… https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=551225542141007&id=100017606988153


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-10 16:02:15 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215665164743258112

  • PARENTING Again: if parenting was that influential we couldn’t exist. Instead, p

    PARENTING

    Again: if parenting was that influential we couldn’t exist. Instead, parents primary control is ONLY who they mate with, and while you can’t make your kids ‘better’ you can do them harm. So in parenting, as in ethics, DO NO WRONG is far more important than trying to do right.

    Because once they are in the real world they will always and everywhere revert to type – hence why your ancestors and mine sought to give them enough MANNERS to get prestige jobs young. This is how we ‘buy’ positions for our children. The half-life of your parenting is short.

    Training in Hygiene, Dress, Manners, Diction, Active Listening, Vocabulary, Ethics, Morals, and especially the basics of lists, money, accounting, interest, and contract, help everyone. Because success is caused by conscientiousness (discipline) regardless of intellectual ability.

    Let me say that again for clarity: Economic returns on intelligence are marginal and economic returns on behavioral training (manners, ethics, morals etc) are exponential. And the importance of Active Listening, Seeking To Understand, Hygiene, Grooming, Dress and Vocabulary, Weightlifting for men and Dancing for Women, and team sports for both cannot be overstated.

    All those disciplines produce mindfulness. This is counter intuitive to people but your stress in life is usually determined by your success at training yourself out of impulsivity through rituals, and training in Hygiene, Dress, Manners, Diction, Active Listening, Seeking to Understand, Vocabulary, Ethics, Morals, and especially the basics of list making, money, accounting, interest, and contract, produce a calm mind far better and more productively than religion or therapy.

    One’s natural Intellectual ability only grants access to complexity, and marginal increases in income, while conscientiousness and training (above) grant access to opportunity, success and wealth. Getting kids into ‘good schools’ etc doesn’t improve them it filters them (buys them access).

    That explains classes. (Uncomfortable truth warning) Different ethnic groups differ largely because of differences in neoteny(rate and depth of maturity) and as such sexual, social, and economic market value – more importantly in the short term, it affects ages for learning different skills.

    This is why our education system ‘treating us as equal’ is a failure since the most neotenous (east asians) can learn anything young at the cost of ‘topping out’ young, where less neotenous (europeans) need more development, and least neotenous afro-asiatic and africans more physicality and socialization, before they can be relaxed enough for intellectualization – even so, the asian method of combining group movements, recitation, and learning are disproportionately more effective than seated classroom work. And seated classroom work is far more effective with lots of slowly incremental rather than short steep increases in difficulty.

    Girls aren’t ‘getting ahead’ of boys in mixed gender, mixed race schools – the schools are damaging boys development of physical movement, planning, and dominance play, making them care nothing about self others or society, and increasing psychosis in girls without a hierarchy of multiple ages to limit behavior and focus emotion on reciprocal training – and we are seeing it play out in all walks of life. Competition socializes.

    So, tiger moms are buying children access to filters not improving their children (and we see this in the work force over time). And by not TRAINING in the basics (manners ethics and aggressive competition) that matter most we are creating an infantilized emotional population unfit or not only military service, the work force, but a political system we call democracy.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-10 12:41:00 UTC

  • DEMAND FOR MALE BRAIN INCREASES WITH EVOLUTION The problem is, that as neoteny i

    DEMAND FOR MALE BRAIN INCREASES WITH EVOLUTION

    The problem is, that as neoteny increases so apparently does possibility mental illness, and ‘the pill’ increases possibility of mental illness – so the masculine brain (autism spectrum) is the only defense against the two sides (agency, mental illness) of neoteny (slowing and limiting rate and depth of maturity).

    Ties into Bill’s Post:

    FAILURE POINTS: MALE, PACK, (K) vs FEMALE, HERD, (R)

    by Bill Joslin

    Friend or Foe Detection Failures for Each Bias:

    1. FEMALE: far left presume everyone is a friend (Failed Foe Detection)

    2. MALE: failed right presume everyone’s an enemy (Failed Friend Detection

    Theres a biological component when factoring in female in-group preference which spikes with oxy. Females under higher oxy have higher ingroup preference and higher threat alertness. males don’t have this same dynamic.

    My speculation is that females trigger threat warnings earlier (on sight, at a distances). Males, who need to investigate the threat, can’t have the same spike. They investigate and upon receiving threaten signals from the stranger, then they spike in ingroup preference. And that seems to play out less as hatred for the outgroup, and more as “taking care on my brothers” different expression of ingroup preference.

    The former being outgroup aversion (offensive), the later being ingroup care(defensive).


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-10 12:02:00 UTC

  • FAILURE POINTS: MALE, PACK, (K) vs FEMALE, HERD, (R) by Bill Joslin Friend or Fo

    FAILURE POINTS: MALE, PACK, (K) vs FEMALE, HERD, (R)

    by Bill Joslin

    Friend or Foe Detection Failures for Each Bias:

    1. FEMALE: far left presume everyone is a friend (Failed Foe Detection)

    2. MALE: failed right presume everyone’s an enemy (Failed Friend Detection

    (Curt: I’ve been looking for that rule. Well done!)


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-10 11:31:00 UTC

  • WISDOM LEARNED AND WISDOM EARNED: WE ARE SELF DOMESTICATING —“The hardest thin

    WISDOM LEARNED AND WISDOM EARNED: WE ARE SELF DOMESTICATING

    —“The hardest thing over the last few years I’ve had to come to accept has had to be be the proposition that “we are self-domesticating.” That we must own efforts in every “agent-arena” relationship because no one but us will. For those of us like myself that “wandered through the existential desert”, wasting years of life without guidance, that we must climb near-vertical trajectories. All the while respecting Hanlon’s Razor[1] as you brush arms with others. It’s tough at times. The etiquette and refinement is a lifelong investment. It doesn’t get easier, you just get better. All the while expecting nothing, keeping humility, etc.”— Todd E. Magnusson

    Elegant. Honest. Heartfelt. From experience. True.

    Staying on message: This is the reason we need to teach the stoic method as basic emotional fitness. It provides mindfulness without the need for falsehoods (religion). Realism, Naturalism, Empiricism, Operationalism, Acquisitionism-Propertarianism, Cooperationism, Reciprocity, Reciprocity to our Ancestors, Mindfulness.

    That is the only ‘True’ Religion we know of.



    [1] Hanlon’s Razor: “Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.”


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-10 11:02:00 UTC

  • STOICISM’S ANSWER TO MINDFULNESS Missed this, but omfg, yes it’s that simple. I

    STOICISM’S ANSWER TO MINDFULNESS

    Missed this, but omfg, yes it’s that simple.

    I am a Stoic if:

    1) I live in accordance with natural law and reason;

    2) I avoid fallacy of sunk costs in everything;

    3) I limit my attention to what is actionable;

    4) I am never a victim of circumstances as I always have a choice to change them.

    As far as I know, this is all that is required of me to be a Stoic.

    – @[1655513331:2048:Martin Štěpán]

    In effect, mindfulness provides control of loss aversion and all the subsequent feeling of being ‘out of control’ of one’s environment. Saying “it’s god’s plan” does exactly the same thing”. The difference being that under stoicism you are in control and under theology the big man in the sky is in control.

    Why? Because we are twice as motivate by fear of lass as we are by incentive to gain.

    Why? Because we know most of our theories (plans) fail.

    Why? Because of neural economy, mental calculation (thinking) is expensive, error prone, but we must maintain the will to act in the kaleidic universe so we preserve the illusion.

    SUNK COSTS

    Fallacy of sunken cost is when you consider something you’ve already invested into more valuable even though that investment doesn’t exist anymore. I.e. I might keep repairing an old car I’ve already poured lots of money into despite the fact that I’d save money by replacing it with a better because I fallaciously include what I paid in the value of the old one.

    In Stoicism, I can use the most extreme example provided by Epictetus. If my child dies, there’s no sense in getting emotional over it because that investment is gone and I can’t get it back.

    LOSS AVERSION

    Loss aversion is encapsulated in the expression “losses loom larger than gains” The pain of losing is psychologically about twice as powerful as the pleasure of gaining. People are more willing to take risks (or behave dishonestly) to avoid a loss than to make a gain. Loss aversion has been used to explain the endowment effect and sunk cost fallacy, and it may also play a role in the status quo bias.

    The basic principle of loss aversion can explain why penalty frames are sometimes more effective than reward frames in motivating people.

    REGRET AVERSION

    When people fear that their decision will turn out to be wrong in hindsight, they exhibit regret aversion. Regret-averse people may fear the consequences of both errors of omission (e.g. not buying the right investment property) and commission (e.g. buying the wrong investment property) (Seiler et al., 2008). The effect of anticipated regret is particularly well-studied in the domain of health, such as people’s decisions about medical treatments. A meta-analysis in this area suggests that anticipated regret is a better predictor of intentions and behavior than other kinds of anticipated negative emotions and evaluations of risk (Brewer et al., 2016).

    MENTAL ACCOUNTING

    Mental accounting is when people think of value in relative rather than absolute terms. They derive pleasure not just from an object’s value, but also the quality of the deal – its transaction utility (Thaler, 1985). In addition, humans often fail to fully consider opportunity costs (tradeoffs) and are susceptible to the sunk cost fallacy.

    Why are people willing to spend more when they pay with a credit card than cash? Why would more individuals spend $10 on a theater ticket if they had just lost a $10 bill than if they had to replace a lost ticket worth $10? Why are people more likely to spend a small inheritance and invest a large one?

    According to the theory of mental accounting, people treat money differently, depending on factors such as the money’s origin and intended use, rather than thinking of it in terms of the “bottom line” as in formal accounting (Thaler, 1999). An important term underlying the theory is fungibility, the fact that all money is interchangable and has no labels. In mental accounting, people treat assets as less fungible than they really are. Even seasoned investors are susceptible to this bias when they view recent gains as disposable “house money” that can be used in high-risk investments. In doing so, they make decisions on each mental account separately, losing out the big picture of the portfolio.

    Consumers’ tendency to work with mental accounts is reflected in various domains of applied behavioral science, especially in the financial services industry. Examples include banks offering multiple accounts with savings goal labels, which make mental accounting more explicit, as well as third-party services that provide consumers with aggregate financial information across different financial institutions

    ENDOWMENT EFFECT

    This bias occurs when we overvalue something that we own, regardless of its objective market value. It is evident when people become relatively reluctant to part with a good they own for its cash equivalent, or if the amount that people are willing to pay for the good is lower than what they are willing to accept when selling it. Put more simply, people place a greater value on things once they have established ownership. This is especially true for things that wouldn’t normally be bought or sold on the market, usually items with symbolic, experiential, or emotional significance. Endowment effect research has been conducted with goods ranging from coffee mugs to sports cards (List, 2011). While researchers have proposed different reasons for the effect, it may be best explained by psychological factors related to loss aversion.

    STATUS QUO BIAS

    Status quo bias is evident when people prefer things to stay the same by doing nothing (see also inertia) or by sticking with a decision made previously. This may happen even when only small transition costs are involved and the importance of the decision is great.

    Field data from university health plan enrollments, for example, show a large disparity in health plan choices between new and existing enrollees. One particular plan with significantly more favorable premiums and deductibles had a growing market share among new employees, but a significantly lower share among older enrollees. This suggests that a lack of switching could not be explained by unchanging preferences.

    Samuelson and Zeckhauser note that status quo bias is consistent with loss aversion, and that it could be psychologically explained by previously made commitments, sunk cost thinking, cognitive dissonance, a need to feel in control, and regret avoidance. The latter is based on Kahneman and Tversky’s observation that people feel greater regret for bad outcomes that result from new actions taken than for bad consequences that are the consequence of inaction.

    While status quo bias is frequently considered to be irrational, sticking to choices that worked in the past is often a safe and less difficult decision due to informational and cognitive limitations (see bounded rationality). For example, status quo bias is more likely when there is choice overload or high uncertainty and deliberation costs.

    COMMITMENT BIAS

    Commitments (see also precommitment) are often used as a tool to counteract people’s lack of willpower and to achieve behavior change, such as in the areas of dieting or saving. The greater the cost of breaking a commitment, the more effective it is (Dolan et al., 2010). From the perspective of social psychology, individuals are motivated to maintain a consistent and positive self-image (Cialdini, 2008), and they are likely to keep commitments to avoid reputational damage (if done publicly) and/or cognitive dissonance (Festinger, 1957). A field experiment in a hotel, for example, found 25% greater towel reuse among guests who made a commitment to reuse towels at check-in and wore a “Friend of the Earth” lapel pin to signal their commitment during their stay (Baca-Motes et al., 2012). The behavior change technique of ‘goal setting’ is related to making commitments (Strecher et al., 1995), while reciprocity involves an implicit commitment.

    ACTION BIAS

    Some core ideas in behavioral economics focus on people’s propensity to do nothing, as evident in default bias and status quo bias. Inaction may be due to a number of factors, including inertia or anticipated regret. However, sometimes people have an impulse to act in order to gain a sense of control over a situation and eliminate a problem. This has been termed the action bias (Patt & Zeckhauser, 2000). For example, a person may opt for a medical treatment rather than a no-treatment alternative, even though clinical trials have not supported the treatment’s effectiveness.

    Action bias is particularly likely to occur if we do something for others or others expect us to act (see social norms), as illustrated by the tendency for soccer goal keepers to jump to left or right on penalty kicks, even though statistically they would be better off if they just stayed in the middle of the goal (Bar-Eli et al., 2007). Action bias may also be more likely among overconfident individuals or if a person has experienced prior negative outcomes (Zeelenberg et al., 2002), where subsequent inaction would be a failure to do something to improve the situation.

    INFORMATION AVOIDANCE

    Information avoidance in behavioral economics (Golman et al., 2017) refers to situations in which people choose not to obtain knowledge that is freely available. Active information avoidance includes physical avoidance, inattention, the biased interpretation of information (see also confirmation bias) and even some forms of forgetting. In behavioral finance, for example, research has shown that investors are less likely to check their portfolio online when the stock market is down than when it is up, which has been termed the ostrich effect (Karlsson et al., 2009). More serious cases of avoidance happen when people fail to return to clinics to get medical test results, for instance (Sullivan et al., 2004).

    While information avoidance is sometimes strategic, it can have immediate hedonic benefits for people if it prevents the negative (usually psychological) consequences of knowing the information. It usually carries negative utility in the long term, because it deprives people of potentially useful information for decision making and feedback for future behavior. Furthermore, information avoidance can contribute to a polarization of political opinions and media bias.

    CONFIRMATION BIAS

    Confirmation bias (Wason, 1960) occurs when people seek out or evaluate information in a way that fits with their existing thinking and preconceptions. The domain of science, where theories should advance based on both falsifying and supporting evidence, has not been immune to bias, which is often associated with people processing hypotheses in ways that end up confirming them (Oswald & Grosjean, 2004). Similarly, a consumer who likes a particular brand and researches a new purchase may be motivated to seek out customer reviews on the internet that favor that brand. Confirmation bias has also been related to unmotivated processes, including primacy effects and anchoring, evident in a reliance on information that is encountered early in a process (Nickerson, 1998).Updated Jan 9, 2020, 4:04 PM


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-09 16:04:00 UTC

  • It’s not that she’s unaware of it, but for some reason she’s able to maintain ag

    It’s not that she’s unaware of it, but for some reason she’s able to maintain agency in spite of it (pain is processed dorsally and interferes (grabs attention).


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-09 15:09:14 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215289433924276225

    Reply addressees: @WorMartiN

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215288139440324609


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