Time Is Not Your Enemy

Month

May 2011

Apr 30, 20117,394 notes
Apr 30, 20113,536 notes
Apr 30, 201118 notes

April 2011

Play
Apr 30, 2011
#OceanLab
Apr 30, 2011459 notes
Apr 30, 2011163 notes
#macabre
Apr 30, 20111 note
#mdk
Apr 29, 2011
Over 50 political accounts deleted in Facebook purge | UCL Occupation → blog.ucloccupation.com

There appears to be a purge of political Facebook groups taking place. Profiles are being deleted without warning or explanation. In the last 12 hours, Facebook has deleted around 50 sites…

Apr 29, 2011
For People Who Have Not Suffered Through Statistics → en.wikipedia.org

Confirmation bias (also called confirmatory bias or myside bias) is a tendency for people to favor information that confirms their preconceptions or hypotheses regardless of whether the information is true.[Note 1][1] As a result, people gather evidence and recall information from memory selectively, and interpret it in a biased way. The biases appear in particular for emotionally significant issues and for established beliefs. For example, in reading about gun control, people usually prefer sources that affirm their existing attitudes. They also tend to interpret ambiguous evidence as supporting their existing position. Biased search, interpretation and/or recall have been invoked to explain attitude polarization (when a disagreement becomes more extreme even though the different parties are exposed to the same evidence), belief perseverance (when beliefs persist after the evidence for them is shown to be false), the irrational primacy effect (a stronger weighting for data encountered early in an arbitrary series) and illusory correlation (in which people falsely perceive an association between two events or situations).

A series of experiments in the 1960s suggested that people are biased towards confirming their existing beliefs. Later work explained these results in terms of a tendency to test ideas in a one-sided way, focusing on one possibility and ignoring alternatives. In combination with other effects, this strategy can bias the conclusions that are reached. Explanations for the observed biases include wishful thinking and the limited human capacity to process information. Another proposal is that people show confirmation bias because they are pragmatically assessing the costs of being wrong, rather than investigating in a neutral, scientific way.

Confirmation biases contribute to overconfidence in personal beliefs and can maintain or strengthen beliefs in the face of contrary evidence. Hence they can lead to disastrous decisions, especially in organizational, military, political and social contexts.

Apr 29, 2011
Apr 28, 2011
Apr 28, 201140 notes
#kawaii
Apr 28, 201113,368 notes
Apr 28, 201128 notes
“When you are dealing with humanity as one family, there’s no question of integration or intermarriage. It’s just one human being marrying another human being, or one human being living around and with another human being.” —Malcolm X
Apr 27, 2011
#quotations
“Be different and keep them guessing, and don’t assume because you shouldn’t be guessing.” —
Apr 27, 2011
#quotations
Apr 27, 201129 notes
Apr 26, 20115,692 notes
Apr 26, 201115 notes
Apr 24, 2011
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