Felon trump was told its only because of the Office of the Presidency. . .

:lolup::nuke:

Why people think they're right, even when they are wrong


"If you smugly believe you're right in a disagreement with a friend or colleague, a new study suggests why you may actually be wrong.

Researchers found that people naturally assume they have all the information they need to make a decision or support their position, even when they do not. The researchers called it the "illusion of information adequacy."

"We found that, in general, people don't stop to think whether there might be more information that would help them make a more informed decision," said study co-author Angus Fletcher, a professor of English at The Ohio State University and member of the university's Project Narrative.

"If you give people a few pieces of information that seems to line up, most will say 'that sounds about right' and go with that."

These findings offer a complement to research on what is called naive realism, the belief people have that their subjective understanding of a situation is the objective truth, Fletcher explained. Research on naive realism often focuses on how people have different understandings of the same situation."


 
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