From HuffPost UK
Some supporters of President Donald Trump believe just about everything he says, even when he’s
That’s now known as the Dunning-Kruger effect.
In a new clip that Pindex put together, Fry also explains how Salience Bias and the power of repetition help shape views more than facts.
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance,” Fry says in the clip. “It is the illusion of
Some supporters of President Donald Trump believe just about everything he says, even when he’s
wrong. And Trump himself seems to have absolute confidence in his own beliefs ― again, even when he is demonstrably wrong. But there is a psychology lesson that could help explain it, according to
Cambridge University-educated actor Stephen Fry, who was voted the most intelligent person on TV in the United Kingdom.
For example, researchers found students who were least proficient often overestimated their own
abilities.
“The skills they lacked were the same skills required to recognize their incompetence,” Fry said.
“The skills they lacked were the same skills required to recognize their incompetence,” Fry said.
“The incompetent are often blessed with an inappropriate confidence buoyed by something that feels
to them like knowledge.”
That’s now known as the Dunning-Kruger effect.
In a new clip that Pindex put together, Fry also explains how Salience Bias and the power of repetition help shape views more than facts.
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance,” Fry says in the clip. “It is the illusion of
knowledge.”
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