Szymon's Zettelkasten

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Show two groups of people a blurry image of a fire hydrant, blurry enough for them not to recognize what it is. For one group, increase the resolution slowly, in ten steps. For the second, do it faster, in five steps. Stop at a point where both groups have been presented an identical image and ask each of them to identify what they see. The members of the group that saw fewer intermediate steps are likely to recognize the hydrant much faster. Moral? The more information you give someone, the more hypotheses they will formulate along the way, and the worse off they will be. They see more random noise and mistake it for information. The problem is that our ideas are sticky: once we produce a theory, we are not likely to change our minds—so those who delay developing their theories are better off. When you develop your opinions on the basis of weak evidence, you will have difficulty interpreting subsequent information that contradicts these opinions, even if this new information is obviously more accurate. Two mechanisms are at play here: the confirmation bias that we saw in Chapter 5, and belief perseverance, the tendency not to reverse opinions you already have. Remember that we treat ideas like possessions, and it will be hard for us to part with them.

Taleb, Nassim. The Black Swan (p. 144). Penguin Books Ltd. Kindle Edition.

Because of the narrative fallacy we can't help but create theories and conclusions. We also do it when presented with weak, noisy data. What's worse, because of the confirmation bias we often stick to those explanations even when presented with better and more accurate evidence. Therefore, it's better to refrain from forming theories too quickly.

The WRAP methodology is great there especially Widen your options and Reality-test your assumptions.

Moments of slack and leaving things unfinished. Doing random stuff

How do I refrain myself from making decisions too early?

Having the options wide, the solutions wide, and comparing them like in OST?

Giving oneself a lot of time to reach the decision?

Btw., this is a topic for the newsletter