Why Smart People Believe Stupid Things

What causes Delusion? The prevailing view is that people adopt false beliefs because they’re too stupid or ignorant to grasp the truth. But just as often, the opposite is true: many delusions prey not on dim minds but on bright ones. And this has serious implications for education, society, and you personally.
In this video in collaboration with Gurwinder, we explore the reasons why intelligent people believe irrational things and what can be done to avoid the allure of delusion.
Check out the full podcast with Gurwinder on the Rise of Irrational Thinking - • The Rise of Irrational...
Check out Gurwinder's Substack - gurwinder.substack.com/
Follow Gurwinder on Twitter - / g_s_bhogal
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Visit our site at www.afterskool.net/
Or send us an email at afterskool100@gmail.com

Пікірлер: 8 400

  • @PedroIgori
    @PedroIgoriАй бұрын

    We need to stop conflating educated with smart

  • @ephraimwinslow

    @ephraimwinslow

    Ай бұрын

    "Educated" in modern terms basically just means "well-trained" according to the most annoyingly passive-aggressive HR-based curriculum imaginable.

  • @austinsatterfield6792

    @austinsatterfield6792

    Ай бұрын

    Actually I've noticed that collage graduates are often dumbest as it requires being a yes man

  • @gallant1772

    @gallant1772

    Ай бұрын

    @@austinsatterfield6792100% it makes u docile and take less risks.

  • @AfterSkool

    @AfterSkool

    Ай бұрын

    "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain

  • @DyceFreak

    @DyceFreak

    Ай бұрын

    Street smarts vs studied intellectuals; I'll take street smarts any day.

  • @steveelliott9746
    @steveelliott9746Ай бұрын

    George Orwell said "Some ideas are so stupid only an intellectual would believe them."

  • @DesertStateNevada

    @DesertStateNevada

    Ай бұрын

    Makes sense why colleges are the hotspots for the ideology I can't name cause my comment will be deleted. College/university is the biggest scam of the past 50 years. Anybody who is college educated will have a very hard time believing they're only smart in the subject they got their education in, while in other subjects they're not any smarter than a truck driver. I'm using truck drivers as an example because they are pretty much the punching bag for intellectuals.

  • @DesertStateNevada

    @DesertStateNevada

    Ай бұрын

    Makes sense why colleges are the hotspots for the ideology I can't name cause my comment will be deleted. College/university is the biggest sham of the past 50 years. Anybody who is college educated will have a very hard time believing they're only smart in the subject they got their education in, while in other subjects they're not any smarter than a truck driver. I'm using truck drivers as an example because they are pretty much the "example" intellectuals keep using when describing lesser people.

  • @Yak1312

    @Yak1312

    Ай бұрын

    @@DesertStateNevadaHitler used schools to indoctrinate his future followers.

  • @129jaystreet

    @129jaystreet

    Ай бұрын

    Orwell was a prophet.

  • @eoinoconnell185

    @eoinoconnell185

    Ай бұрын

    I always think of that quote when someone tries to tell me a woman can have a penis etc.

  • @michaelplaysgames428
    @michaelplaysgames4289 күн бұрын

    “Unintelligent people are more easily mislead by other people, while intelligent people are more easily mislead by themselves.” The fact that I didn’t realize this earlier is eye opening. Wow

  • @LEgregius

    @LEgregius

    Күн бұрын

    I don't think there is much truth to this because it doesn't really fix the evidence, so it makes sense that you would not have realized it. People are social and tend to form groups. These groups use identity markers including speech patterns, specific beliefs, and actions to try to weed out people who aren't truly part of their group. This used to be a matter of survival, but now it just means people pick a social group, then change their beliefs based on their group. This is true for everyone. People who have practiced critical thinking skill in a wide variety of scenarios and who understand how to read statistics and studies, and are wiling to go to the effort of trying to prove themselves wrong will have some ability to escape this. These will almost always be intelligent people who value knowing the truth.

  • @johnsanko4136
    @johnsanko4136Ай бұрын

    One of the important parts of our own education that we have lost is doubt. Doubt is a vital tool we use to find flaws in our thoughts and reinforce truths we know, but our culture hates the idea of doubts. Doubts are to be ignored and avoided so as to not disrupt the beliefs we are to cling to. Doubts are uncomfortable and our culture wants comfort over everything. To our culture, doubting is seen as a negative, that you have underlying biased "-isms" preventing you from blindly accepting the narrative message.

  • @Marci124

    @Marci124

    27 күн бұрын

    Doubt is one thing lost, I'll go one even more out there: shame. Or modesty, even.

  • @ejtattersall156

    @ejtattersall156

    7 күн бұрын

    Yes, doubt, shame, modesty, all limit of arrogance which leads to self-rationalization. One thing, however, is, are you looking for the truth or looking to be right? For my own purposes, I don't look for the truth or to be right. I look for what works, and what doesn't work. I have adopted many positions and over time seen that they just don't work. So right wingers think I'm leftist and left wingers think I'm rightist. One thing that makes EVERYONE happy is: the right denies science on climate, and the left, on gender. Took me years to get there.

  • @16m49x3

    @16m49x3

    6 күн бұрын

    @@Marci124 shame is seriously lacking in our societies

  • @EricK-nm2gg

    @EricK-nm2gg

    6 күн бұрын

    Doubt must assume that the person has to doubt themselves, admitting that what they know is insufficient. You mean people should entertain their doubts instead of believing their beliefs? Preposterous! How dare you suggest such blasphemy. My beliefs can’t possibly be wrong.

  • @AfterSkool
    @AfterSkoolАй бұрын

    "Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is knowing Not to put it in a fruit salad." - Brian O'Driscoll

  • @The13thRonin

    @The13thRonin

    Ай бұрын

    Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is eating your tomato as you ponder the meaningless categorization of various foodstuffs.

  • @CAIOFELIPE08

    @CAIOFELIPE08

    Ай бұрын

    @@The13thRonin do you think is this meaningless? It often helps to think which category i have to put in my diet

  • @JHavoc-rt2fe

    @JHavoc-rt2fe

    Ай бұрын

    Maybe I like tomatoes in my fruit salad.

  • @JamesBrown-rd8og

    @JamesBrown-rd8og

    Ай бұрын

    Good PoinT

  • @JamesBrown-rd8og

    @JamesBrown-rd8og

    Ай бұрын

    you are very alone in this matter@@JHavoc-rt2fe

  • @randywise5241
    @randywise5241Ай бұрын

    Just because someone is smart, it doesn't mean they are wise.

  • @kikilicious99

    @kikilicious99

    Ай бұрын

    Elaborate

  • @colinjohnrudd

    @colinjohnrudd

    Ай бұрын

    And just because someone is wise, it doesn't mean they are smart.

  • @Rambam1776

    @Rambam1776

    Ай бұрын

    Nobody was conflating the two, and you have not provided a definition for either, so this statement is as meaningless and stupid as I presume you to be

  • @VeganSemihCyprus33

    @VeganSemihCyprus33

    Ай бұрын

    Smart people believe in stupid things because they don't know this 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary]🌳

  • @nck4888

    @nck4888

    Ай бұрын

    ​​@@colinjohnrudd @kikilicious your comments appear as you're offended by the original post

  • @Brovillion559
    @Brovillion559Ай бұрын

    I think the real problem is social media. Before SM you had to go out and learn what you were interested in. And when you spoke you had an understanding a little deeper than others and we learned from each other. Now days everyone can pretend they know more about a subject than they actually do. But they get upset hoping their frustration will suffice as intelligence. It’s insane. There’s so much more to explain.

  • @lllordllloyd

    @lllordllloyd

    Ай бұрын

    ... and every online 'debate' descends almost immediately into personal attack.

  • @akeem2983

    @akeem2983

    23 күн бұрын

    On the other hand, internet is the extremely powerful way to gain and spread knowledge. Yes, it could be used both for spreading truth and lies (and I personally had seen a lot of examples when lies too were spreading everywhere until one smart person found out that it's actually not true), but in essence it does make truth spread significantly faster than it was before the internet. It also gives people more opportunities to proof themselves wrong, since a lot of scientific knowledge is open in the internet

  • @lllordllloyd

    @lllordllloyd

    23 күн бұрын

    @@akeem2983 It's not just the speed: in the internet age, reputation means nothing. Having been wrong a dozen times- a hundred times- before is not impediment to pumping out BS and finding a willing audience. Until the 1990s, politicians had to resign, media figures were sacked, liars were sent to oblivion and remembered by the public for being liars (thus discouraging others). Politicians, news channels, celebrities promoting everything from science to cooking, put great stock in being seen to be honest. The internet has freed us from consequences, from the guiding morality of (the better part of) society.

  • @kimj5037
    @kimj503729 күн бұрын

    There is a lot of wisdom in this talk. One of the lines that jumped out to me was, "Most goals of thinking are not to reach objective truth, but to justify what we wish to believe." And the solution...."the strongest countermeasure against bias is curiosity."

  • @justinbuddy56

    @justinbuddy56

    13 күн бұрын

    I have a mini whiteboard of quotes I like, I just took this one from the video: “Why do I really believe what I believe? What other reasons besides reason could I have?”

  • @DouglasAtkinson
    @DouglasAtkinsonАй бұрын

    “Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” ― Philip K. Dick

  • @theq6797

    @theq6797

    Ай бұрын

    Hate is the answer.

  • @stylis666

    @stylis666

    Ай бұрын

    @@theq6797 I hate you for saying nothing and typing shit anyway. I hope it helps. Can you go away when I stop thinking about you?

  • @theq6797

    @theq6797

    Ай бұрын

    @@stylis666 Who cares what you feel or think?

  • @SebastiansSebastian-fc4pj

    @SebastiansSebastian-fc4pj

    Ай бұрын

    "intelligence is giving the bad news to the person as fast as possible.. wisdom is to give time for that person to accept it" One wants things to work out quickly and have progress, the other takes its time cause it knows that this might affect future events of that person badly

  • @Kube_Dog

    @Kube_Dog

    Ай бұрын

    I don't like that statement. So I'm gonna saying he's smart but biased.

  • @armorbearer9702
    @armorbearer9702Ай бұрын

    You reminded me of what Theodore Roosevelt said about thieves. He said, "A man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car; but if he has a university education, he may steal the whole railroad".

  • @wrestlingPC

    @wrestlingPC

    Ай бұрын

    Must have been talking about, Andrew Carnegie.

  • @user-gu2yy6kq9y

    @user-gu2yy6kq9y

    Ай бұрын

    I'm sure Roosevelt knows all too well about this subject. He graduated with honorable mentions!!

  • @fbcpraise

    @fbcpraise

    Ай бұрын

    Wow, thanks for sharing that.

  • @rosemarietolentino3218

    @rosemarietolentino3218

    Ай бұрын

    Can’t do that without a education.

  • @bvdswqawe11

    @bvdswqawe11

    Ай бұрын

    @@wrestlingPCwell said,you lefty brainiac ,but you forget how many benefited from his " thievery"

  • @Kenji-117
    @Kenji-117Ай бұрын

    The worst thing is when you break the ego of an "intelligent" person by proving the person wrong and you see them snapping. the ego takes full control and the irrational argumentation or coping starts happening. It's so scaring how many people have a fragile mental fortitude and are so incapable of critical thinking.

  • @DeleteMyas

    @DeleteMyas

    Ай бұрын

    It's more scary that you're letting losers like that scare you. : |

  • @MadsterV

    @MadsterV

    Ай бұрын

    Once one, when shown wrong, exclaimed "what am I supposed to say here" And me, naively expecting him to admit he was wrong. What a fragile ego, tied to being right about everything constantly.

  • @moneymike226

    @moneymike226

    28 күн бұрын

    I know this to be true, just as I know logical fallacies and cognitive biases to be true, but I still find it so crazy. If I can be proved wrong about something, I love it. Being proved wrong means I was provided information I didn't have. I'll never be mad about learning something.

  • @punkrockmonsters2660

    @punkrockmonsters2660

    18 күн бұрын

    Do you see how ironic it is you are the one who proved them wrong in your experience? I see this too in others that is easy, the hard part is seeing it happen to me, the shame of realizing too late or even worse not at all.

  • @user-gc8pc3ol6l

    @user-gc8pc3ol6l

    11 күн бұрын

    Like climate change deniers, the idiots during the pandemic who think they knew everything about virology and immunology ? Just dumb people trying to prop up their insecurities with social media science.

  • @alexv3357
    @alexv335722 күн бұрын

    I've always expressed this idea as "being good at one thing has absolutely no bearing on one's skill at any other thing."

  • @gerberjoanne266
    @gerberjoanne266Ай бұрын

    "Without the right personal qualities, more education won't make you a master of your biases, it will only make you a better servant of them." Wow! That is so well said!

  • @daughterofTheLion

    @daughterofTheLion

    Ай бұрын

    Perfectly describes modern medicine!

  • @sophiepooks2174

    @sophiepooks2174

    Ай бұрын

    @@daughterofTheLionGood stuff one more free hospital bed for someone who is thankful for modern medicine.

  • @sophiepooks2174

    @sophiepooks2174

    Ай бұрын

    Yet sadly so many on here are too blinkered, too obsessed with buzzwords they hear their peers saying, but don't seriously care to enlighten themselves or question any thing they believe in, change is never easy in the beginning but we adapt.

  • @masterlinktm

    @masterlinktm

    Ай бұрын

    @@sophiepooks2174 "more free hospital bed" please take them. I'll go on living a healthy natural life not pupped full of chemicals 24/7

  • @samr.england613

    @samr.england613

    Ай бұрын

    So glad to see that you think of yourself as so well-spoken. (You did, however, put it in quotes, so, are we to assume it's not YOUR quote?) If so, who's is it, then?

  • @kaunas888
    @kaunas888Ай бұрын

    Intelligence is overrated, while honesty is underrated.

  • @allesaufanfang-sarah

    @allesaufanfang-sarah

    Ай бұрын

    truth is underrated, really

  • @therealgelogist

    @therealgelogist

    Ай бұрын

    Orienting yourself toward the pursuit of truth no matter where it leads you is the most intelligent way to live.

  • @LegioDecemGJCAESAR

    @LegioDecemGJCAESAR

    Ай бұрын

    Omg the truth of this statement, but if you also add ignorance it is more encompassing of reality despite sounding contradictory

  • @cosmicaudio4589

    @cosmicaudio4589

    Ай бұрын

    If people were honest about their inteligence, 99% of humanity would be classed as knuckle draggers. It's not what you know its who you know and nepotism reigns supreme in todays world!! Some of the most wealthy people on this planet are some of the most inbred dumb fuckers known, but being born into money and employing bright people has always dug them hugh riches!! And greedy people work for them!! Humanity is bizarre and absurd!!

  • @treasurethetime2463

    @treasurethetime2463

    Ай бұрын

    Intelligence is just one of many tools. For a boxer, it's like being fast or strong or agile. None of those attributes individually guarantee success for a boxer. Intelligence is the same thing.

  • @amberspicks547
    @amberspicks54719 күн бұрын

    I’m picking up the faint scent of confirmation bias around this video.

  • @The_Malaka

    @The_Malaka

    2 күн бұрын

    That’s what a leftist would say!!!! 🤡

  • @danguee1

    @danguee1

    Күн бұрын

    You're a Leftist, aren't you?!?

  • @The_Malaka

    @The_Malaka

    Күн бұрын

    @@danguee1 🤣🤣🤣

  • @juliandarch9278

    @juliandarch9278

    Күн бұрын

    And that's the issue, you are not curious you are looking for a fight!

  • @SoloRenegade

    @SoloRenegade

    Күн бұрын

    your comment proves the whole point of the video.

  • @artlifetheatre
    @artlifetheatreАй бұрын

    The central point is overshadowed by the biased judgments of “wokeism”… either the creator judging all liberally minded people based on the most extreme examples of people who consider themselves liberals, or he’s creating a straw-man to dismiss anything that he considers “woke”… “Woke” means having awareness of social injustice, it’s as simple as that. So by definition, anyone who follows his advice to be curious is doomed to become “Woke” by definition as they become aware, regardless of which side of the debate they are on. White nationalists claiming persecution are by definition “Woke” because they believe themselves to be aware of a social injustice against white people.

  • @jwriccardi

    @jwriccardi

    25 күн бұрын

    Agreed, it's like the creator lost track of the original point and went on a bizarre conspiracy theory tangent of his own. Is this intentional self-satire to illustrate the point?

  • @vapx0075

    @vapx0075

    5 күн бұрын

    This wishy washy nothing video makes me unreasonably angry. 1. By educating ourselves against our biases we introduce more biases into our thinking? Are we supposed to burn books or read them, what's the actual take here? 2. There's no nuanced discussion about self love as a helpful tool in one's personal weight loss journey it's just "Fat bad", like, common sense would provide that much, no? 3. And why is equality a debatable topic? Performative wokeness might be grating, but nothing improves without some kind of grandstanding to raise awareness. Can't we have a conversation on the usefulness of these behaviours? No? I think I should start a new video collection of sh*t takes just so I can do video essays ripping them apart. What's worse is 99.99% of these comments think this video is helpful. Like, dude, what were your biases before this video? That dogs are better than cats? 4. OP just pretending that intersex people haven't been medically documented. Talk about biases! I'm not X, I don't know an X, therefore X doesn't exist/need fair treatment. If something is medically documented, there is a statistic for it, therefore it exists. Fact, not opinion. I struggle to accept this level of stupidity; that's the bias I need checked at this point. The nuance is they need to churn out content for the algorithm and also maybe they asked an AI to write it. See, even a moron like me can be sympathetic of the stupid. Or at least I continue to try. Dude should have spent more time on it.

  • @sovietunion7643

    @sovietunion7643

    Күн бұрын

    'woke' is used to mean far left, social justice, or whatever you want to call it, thats what he is talking about. the people who hate white people for no reason and think gender can be changed with a thought. he DID NOT say 'liberal minded people' in general. he even spent several parts in the video where conservatives used cognitive bias in the wrong way as well with the slavery justifications back in the day and the KKK, so its not like he didn't try to take swings at both sides, its just that social justice is the far more powerful force in politics and academia right now so its hard for him not to talk about it.

  • @damianmarley7177
    @damianmarley7177Ай бұрын

    For about 5 years, I fell for everything one party would say… and then I studied both sides and fell for what both believed. The only difference now, I go find why propaganda wants us to believe and who funds it.

  • @Alpha-ro8sc

    @Alpha-ro8sc

    Ай бұрын

    They give us our heroes and villans. Funding & fueling each side. Imagine how it will be when we realize that we are all one.

  • @Shadow_banned_again

    @Shadow_banned_again

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly. It’s a divide and conquer scheme.

  • @jjhoughton2812

    @jjhoughton2812

    Ай бұрын

    🌍 any sides?

  • @Alpha-ro8sc

    @Alpha-ro8sc

    Ай бұрын

    @@jjhoughton2812 All sides are an illusion. Anything to divide us. Anything & everything.

  • @caligirliniowaworld

    @caligirliniowaworld

    Ай бұрын

    I grew up Republican In SoCal... flipped when I saw folks losing their life savings and increase of biases. I've been a centrist for better part of 20 years. Voting in the best interest of the community I live in... my military life taught me that most folks want the same things regardless of where they live... the major issue with extreme left or right is the lack of critical thinking and self-interest vs. communal needs. Individualism failed to teach people to work on and love themselves (EQ), and instead, egoism has taken over. People who argue, only want to be right to assert their individuality (ei. Belong to a group) instead of learning to find common ground and truth. People lie to themselves a lot, unfortunately (cognitive dissonance).

  • @alewis8765
    @alewis8765Ай бұрын

    "Trust those who seek truth. Doubt those who claim they've found it." I heard this about twenty years ago, don't remember who gets the credit.

  • @samr.england613

    @samr.england613

    Ай бұрын

    Kind of like men who say they've, 'figured women out'!

  • @jimmyyounger618

    @jimmyyounger618

    Ай бұрын

    I think it's, "Believe those who are seeking the truth. Doubt those who find it." ~ Andre Gide. He won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1947. I liked your quote enough to seek the truth about it. True story. Trust me!

  • @sde9023

    @sde9023

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@samr.england613I've figured them out, and my analysis shows... they're all crazy!!

  • @mcfarvo

    @mcfarvo

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jimmyyounger618uh oh, are you claiming to have found the truth about the source of that quote?! 🤔

  • @jimmyyounger618

    @jimmyyounger618

    Ай бұрын

    @@mcfarvo 😄 I knew I'd heard that quote or something close, but couldn't remember anything else about it. DuckDuckGo claimed to know that Bookbrowse>quotes knew all about it. I'm just a humble messenger of those claims. 👼

  • @douglawson3698
    @douglawson3698Ай бұрын

    There's some truth to this, particularly up front, but as it goes on, it starts to feel a bit Praeger-ish, which is just the sort of clever stupidity it's talking about.

  • @marzipanmouse

    @marzipanmouse

    21 сағат бұрын

    yes. I'm glad I wasn't the only one seeing that.

  • @jonahblock
    @jonahblock10 күн бұрын

    so how do we know this video isn't immune from its own biases? I feel it went after woke pretty hard while ignoring the reasons made it necessary for some people when religion is clearly the greatest example of smart people being dumb as hell

  • @jameseberts3347
    @jameseberts3347Ай бұрын

    Our modern education system stifles curiosity. When I was in school, in the 1970's, we were taught to question everything, if not by our teachers, by our peers. This was an off-shoot of the 1960's, where "question authority" was a mantra. I find that young people now have little curiosity to question what they are taught. This is a credit, and I mean that negatively, to our educational system, where they have learned to prey on young people's naivety and idealism. As a result, maturity and common sense has been delayed and sometimes completely shut down in millions of people.

  • @ankhpom9296

    @ankhpom9296

    Ай бұрын

    Public schooling has been dumbed down. We need workers, not thinkers.

  • @blastically

    @blastically

    Ай бұрын

    In college you are taught to memorize and to give back the answers that your teachers want. Except within very strict parameters you are penalized for wondering if something is really true, for questioning revealed truths or for independent thinking.

  • @nonyadamnbusiness9887

    @nonyadamnbusiness9887

    Ай бұрын

    @@ankhpom9296 There's no longer much need for workers, only servants.

  • @CerealDust-nStuff

    @CerealDust-nStuff

    Ай бұрын

    There’s a free PDF online titled “The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America” that is an absolutely fascinating read, yet also horrifying.

  • @WrongParadox

    @WrongParadox

    Ай бұрын

    @@ankhpom9296 modern public schooling was originally for producing workers for industry - "purpose of school turned more toward economic development " (Industrial Revolution) -- dumbing down isn't a recent thing. The methods and masks used are the only real change.

  • @DCRlive
    @DCRliveАй бұрын

    “A mind is like a parachute. It doesn't work if it is not open.”

  • @jarbear7000

    @jarbear7000

    Ай бұрын

    Some people's minds are so open that their brains fall out

  • @VeganSemihCyprus33

    @VeganSemihCyprus33

    Ай бұрын

    Smart people believe in stupid things because they don't know this 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary]🌳

  • @haraldtheyounger5504

    @haraldtheyounger5504

    Ай бұрын

    An open parachute is not much use on ground level. Indeed, becomes just a burden.

  • @bobbyblazini

    @bobbyblazini

    Ай бұрын

    And you'll never know if it works until you deploy it and use it

  • @user-tg1pu5mo2r

    @user-tg1pu5mo2r

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jarbear7000😁 what I was about to write 👌.

  • @Ice-yp4wg
    @Ice-yp4wgАй бұрын

    I've always had massive gripes with how painfully often seemingly just causes can become corrupted and social justices that should've been good just end up being absolute cesspools but couldn't ever pinpoint why until now. This really gives quite some insight.

  • @Asto508

    @Asto508

    Ай бұрын

    There are no just causes and people who claim to pursue them are usually just in for the very most ulterior motives. Those who are not are too deluded about reality and will be just overwhelmed by the former as soon as the "just cause" gains enough traction.

  • @nmpolo

    @nmpolo

    28 күн бұрын

    Please could you give an example of a "just cause"? "Social justice" is a synonym for mob rule. We have legislation for obtaining justice; vigilantes shouldn't be implementing their own justice.

  • @chuckleberryfinn1992

    @chuckleberryfinn1992

    28 күн бұрын

    The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

  • @VandroiyIII
    @VandroiyIIIАй бұрын

    I tried criticising details of this video and noticed a dilemma, so I deleted the original comment in favor of this one. For a message to spread effectively on this platform, it needs to be optimized for easy, emotional recognition. The top comments here are almost all fuzzy one-liners, emotional stories, or well-known statements people already agree with. Mass voting and algorithms quickly hide content that requires attention or has a slow dopamine response. On top of this comes the culture that is subject of the video. As a result, deeper criticism is so extremely suppressed that its uttering is a waste of time. My own stupidity showed when I once again had the impulse to disagree and debate in this comment section. I should really know better. For decades, I have used various forums, "social media" platforms, and the likes, and seen how too much quality of argument is inversely correlated with success. Invalid means to dumb down and deceive are rewarded, while harsh truth is punished. But yesterday, I still hadn't learned and started typing objections, forgetting the overriding meta-argument that devalues the entire approach. For the odd one who might read to this point, there should be an unsettling implication here. If this is correct and people like me eventually learn it, the result is that we stop objecting if the context fails to reward it. Thereby, the suppression of related opinions is even more effective, exascerbating the groupthink you are subjected to if you do not adapt yourself.

  • @incognitodoge7774

    @incognitodoge7774

    15 күн бұрын

    You do speak of the terrible truth. A possible solution is to see the fallacy of the interent. To not view the user and the human be the same. We are void of empathy and get the worst of Paranoia in here. Intellectual discussions are more better suited with real people in real places. Most people tend to watch about rather than read off of the words of authors as well.

  • @TrulyAtrocious

    @TrulyAtrocious

    10 күн бұрын

    Truth does not lead to reward and therefore people will stop seeking it... That's terrifying...

  • @VandroiyIII

    @VandroiyIII

    10 күн бұрын

    @@TrulyAtrocious Truly terrifying, but only the first of at least four strategies: 1) The naive: to not care about truth that much and use the nonsense to feed the own ego. 2) The repulsed: to embrace becoming grumpy, resentful, and habitually disagreeable. 3) The contrarian influencer: to find a like-minded niche that rewards going against the grain. 4) The two-faced: to seemingly go along with the irrational dynamics, but think differently. The two-faced have the option of becoming an anointed authority, which is a moral catastrophe as they are incentivized to manipulate and outplay other people. Many politicians come to mind.

  • @ominousvirus5278

    @ominousvirus5278

    4 күн бұрын

    @Vandroiyll, What disagreements did you have with the video? Seeing as though you formed your ideas so well, I am quite curious to find out your thoughts. Interestingly, you can use this video’s end psychology of being curious and humble to possibly critique the video.

  • @VandroiyIII

    @VandroiyIII

    4 күн бұрын

    @ominousvirus5278 There is a lot to unpack here. For starters, I do not agree that being humble is a general virtue. Doubting one's own, fallible knowledge in the search for truth is an optimization problem. Both sides are essential: confidence and restraint, balanced with one's own fallibility in mind. Humbleness is no doubt useful to get people to like you, but if truth is the goal, more is not always better and going too far leaves you with an ugly choice: either beccome manipulative, merely pretending to be humble to get social benefits, or a doormat, yielding valuable attention to garbage claims. To be clear, the problem which the video describes is extremely important and largely well-put. But when it comes to drawing conclusions, I suspect that the social dynamics of making a successful video are taking precedence over examining scathing realities and trade-offs. Mainly, questions of attributing vice and adjusting moral imperatives. This whole take is avoiding the question of the limiting factor. The advice around the end concerns *how* to make yourself curious and humble. But let's do a reality check. *Why* do we have any confidence that the lack of these traits is an ultimate cause? By the sound of it, the advice would allow to straightforwardly obtain ever more of the most powerful human skill: predicting reality. If there really is a simple, smooth, gradual path to get this... then why have all our processes failed to find it? Why would we need some semi-fringe video to lead the way... and to explain the answer in just a few common opinions? After seeing the video, are we now enlightened, ready to move on a path of reason? Can the threshold to a convergent solution to human bias be even remotely that low? In short, something is deeply wrong here. This is not plausible at all; why is it even normal to smooth over this glaring issue? There must be a systemic obstacle that is blocking gradual paths to advancing reason. And from this very video, we should already suspect what it is: a cultural context that incentivizes optimization for goals that are in conflict with objectivity. It is not just *your* ego that gets in the way. It is what Sowell (who not so incidentally gets quoted on this channel) calls the Vision of the Anointed, the prevailing vision of our culture, the standards by which we interact. It is the interplay of ego-games between many people of varying rationality. If you simply ignore the incentives and aim for truth, there will be resistance. If you let go of your ego's whims while readily accepting those of others, you need to cope with the negative consequences to stabilize the approach. The result is duplicity. Such approaches can be read about in Robert Greene's works: devaluation of honesty and the use of social dynamics for personal gain, often with no moral regards. This is technically a path to more objective truth, but ignores the question of a cooperative solution, implying that those smart enough to see the implications shall start deceiving less objective people around them, while communicating in implicit codes and protocols. Explicit description of such things is then shunned and manipulative adjustments of public messaging are regarded as normal. As should be obvious, this background of deception is then a massive hindrance to the furthering of reason. All that said, playing soothing music while telling people to just be honestly curious and humble... and advising to "lose arguments" which is really code for accepting unreasonable social punishment... and assuring that the resulting negativity won't matter... well, it makes me want to punch through the screen. This is, in essence, just another anointed strategy, great for an influencer with an audience of millions, someone whose opinions are obviously lucrative to share. This strategy is not so likely to scale to the larger audience, which still bears the cost of naively going along, usually without the rewards in approval and paycheck. This criticism is not very specific to this video. If anything, this one is more honest than most, by naming conflicting goals at all, rather than presupposing good intentions. But the threshold to cracking the root underlying dynamic has not been reached.

  • @ancienbelge
    @ancienbelgeАй бұрын

    “Once you can sincerely say, ‘I don’t know’ then it becomes possible to get at the truth.” (Robert A. Heinlein)

  • @jdwyer5708

    @jdwyer5708

    Ай бұрын

    That's the THE DIVINE LAW OF PRECLUSION in action.. but most of you are too closed off/blocked and/or arrogant to have ever EVEN HEARD of this immutable law.

  • @ogi22

    @ogi22

    Ай бұрын

    I once had a huge s..t storm in my company, just because I asked a cutomer some really normal questions (at least normal for me). But then I was stormed by my superior, that I was wrong, because I did it so openly and showed everyone that a helpdesk doesn't know the subject... Yeah... It is difficult in the beginning to admit you don't know something. It needs to be trained, especially after being schooled all the time to "look like you are correct". It's hard, and just like After School stated - you have to remind yourself to be curious, no matter how others will think about it.

  • @sophiepooks2174

    @sophiepooks2174

    Ай бұрын

    Sadly for many humans ego, vanity and fear of the unknown gets in the way. Hence faith in the unproven, for the things we don't yet comprehend, or some will never be capable of understanding there is faith based on delusion for comfort.

  • @timhallas4275

    @timhallas4275

    Ай бұрын

    The question is, can you be satisfied living life without knowing what is true. Believe it or not, the majority of people you know probably are.

  • @jdwyer5708

    @jdwyer5708

    Ай бұрын

    @@timhallas4275While you are right.. that's not how it works. I teach the universe. Free-will specifically means you are allowed to feel FALSEHOOD and TRAUMA and other ERROR in your subconscious/half-soul as TRUTH. That is literally what free-will is. - The Earth experience in general is VALID-BUT-FALSE. The experience consists of emotions so has validity.. but they are not true so that experience will be degraded over time.. just as you yourself will kill your own physical body over time by being ignorant and out of alignment with divine forces of LOVE and TRUTH. All things TRUE/LOVING (from divine perspective not mans) do not degrade and such worlds exist multiple spheres above where Earth collective consciousness resides

  • @gjclark2478
    @gjclark2478Ай бұрын

    I had a client who was born in the late 1920's and grew up in depression and ww2 as a child. She grew up in hardship and after the war she went into nursing. When I asked her why, she replied ; during the war we saw pow's marched through the town. They built roads and bridges and were welcoming to chat with residents. They talked about family back home and how they were only doing what they were told. She could see ( she left school with no qualifications) that nursing was a benefit to humanity and such we are no different. She became the first woman in the SW of England to be promoted to a managerial career in the nhs as top dog of nursing . She was wise, level headed and sharp as a tack even when she died a few years ago. She put it down to the fact that as a child she was hungry all the time. Christmas was just another day. And once you realise that only you can change the situation you are in, you only have yourself to blame if you stay that way. She landed up marrying a German pow. It's strange, she had seen life not from tv but lived it, her stories were like straight to the point, no BS and not filtered. She was brought up to hate Germans, but married one and she was the first person to tell me the propaganda was despicable during WW2 that she could see through it. For the record, her garden was exceptional and she knew the common and botanical names of every plant in her garden. She died in 2022 and her memory lives on by me talking about her. My point is, she was wise, called a spade a spade and had critical thinking. She had no " qualifications " but saw the world differently.

  • @robertkeyes258

    @robertkeyes258

    Ай бұрын

    She sounds like a remarkable woman.

  • @ConnorWilliamson-pf3zi

    @ConnorWilliamson-pf3zi

    Ай бұрын

    @@robertkeyes258 indeed, like someone that would make you think about just how lucky you are to have known someone like them.

  • @danielwinter441

    @danielwinter441

    Ай бұрын

    the brother on brother wars are despicable and only happen through lies, i love that you put effort in writing the story.

  • @berserker5551

    @berserker5551

    Ай бұрын

    Corny

  • @BarnDoor-won5ve

    @BarnDoor-won5ve

    Ай бұрын

    In celebration of this video's theme, go check out a documentary called: "E V R O P A: The Last battle" And you'll get an idea of just how bad the lies and propaganda were and remain about that entire conflict. It's not what any of us grew up being taught to believe it was. You won't find it on youtube. You are going to have to use alternate, less censored platforms. That alone should tell you something. Everyone is always so concerned with Russia and China, but I'm here to tell ya that no one does propaganda quite like America. There's another great documentary on youtube you can find about a guy named Edward Berneys. He was the nephew of Sigmund Freud and is credited with being THE father of propaganda. It's called "The Centruy of Self"

  • @gavinminion8515
    @gavinminion85154 күн бұрын

    So where do we go next? If a person is curious and lets go of their ego, questions their own beliefs and tries to be humble. Then there is a possibility that this person could come to understand one or more of the problems facing the world. If a second person remains incurious, sticks solidly to the belief they think is correct and disregards humility, then presumably this task becomes much harder. However, only the second person would be thought of as being able to wield power. People will gravitate towards the person who says "The solution to this problem is easy and I know it" over the person who says "The solution to this problem is complex and I don't know if I can solve it, but I will try". Time and again we vote for people who appear strong, determined and sure of their beliefs, even though these are probably the very people who might be least curious and therefore most prone to delusional thinking. So, where do we go next?

  • @leonardwood8213
    @leonardwood821329 күн бұрын

    He’s looking at reality through a cardboard tube

  • @xwing2417

    @xwing2417

    7 күн бұрын

    It's almost like he's guilty of what he's claiming 'woke' scholarship is up to. Woke means whatever they want, so they can feel safe not liking the ideas presented.

  • @allenatkins2263
    @allenatkins2263Ай бұрын

    "I'm suspicious of all agendas, especially my own."

  • @NJGuy1973

    @NJGuy1973

    Ай бұрын

    I have an agenda. If you don't like it, I have others.

  • @macgregorlangston5274
    @macgregorlangston5274Ай бұрын

    A lot of people forget that the original conception of a liberal arts education primarily involved the development of one’s character through education. This goes all the way back to figures like Plato. The expectation was not just increased knowledge and proficiency in academic skill sets, but the development of a person as a person. The omission of this educational purpose today is one of the biggest problems with modern western academia.

  • @eddysgaming9868

    @eddysgaming9868

    Ай бұрын

    The humanities have been academia's biggest loss. It's purpose was also to teach students how to think for themselves.

  • @matthewhall6288

    @matthewhall6288

    Ай бұрын

    Well said.

  • @russianbot4418

    @russianbot4418

    Ай бұрын

    @@eddysgaming9868 And now it teaches them to not think at all.

  • @AM-uh7mv

    @AM-uh7mv

    Ай бұрын

    It helps you find identity as a human being. You can really see the lack of it in people over age 60; don't know who TF they are after retirement

  • @Galvvy

    @Galvvy

    Ай бұрын

    Being taught how to think critically, and apply multiple sets of ideas to a problem doesn't create "docile competent workers" which is what education has been for the last hundred years.

  • @tomservo75
    @tomservo7526 күн бұрын

    "An explanation so illogical that only an academic could think of it." This video is full of gems, I'm going to have to find more from this guy. He puts things in a way I've never been able to verbalize.

  • @brucehaulley8117
    @brucehaulley8117Ай бұрын

    "Winning arguments" versus "discerning truth". Well said.

  • @ianjamison5460

    @ianjamison5460

    Ай бұрын

    Great statement yes

  • @kungfumachinist

    @kungfumachinist

    Ай бұрын

    I watched a vid the other day with Charlie Kirk and Candace Owens and others. Someone from the audience was challenging them, kind of poorly. He was essentially being ridiculed because "facts are unfair". At the end I figured out Kirk, Owens and the others were interested in "winning debate", while the audience member was interested in learning the (whole) truth.

  • @NJGuy1973

    @NJGuy1973

    Ай бұрын

    Jim Jones won arguments with 913 people one day.

  • @momsbenhameen

    @momsbenhameen

    29 күн бұрын

    He said trying to win an argument against "wokeism"

  • @nmpolo

    @nmpolo

    28 күн бұрын

    I don't know the video you mentioned but I'm not a fan of Owens because she comes across as very arrogant. She loves to say how right she is etc. That's not to say she's wrong about anything, I agree with much of what I've heard her say but she doesn't need to be constantly saying how great she is.

  • @Azathoth43
    @Azathoth43Ай бұрын

    Something I noticed several years ago and have tried to actively apply ever since is, if I hear a piece of information and I have strong emotional reaction to it that's the signal to take a step back and look at all the facts and other information before forming an opinion or "taking a side." Also, life is too short to die on every hill.

  • @RedSky8

    @RedSky8

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, exactly. I've noticed this too, it's also a good idea to understand why it emotionally triggers you. That's at least what I do along with what you mentioned.

  • @travisvaught94

    @travisvaught94

    Ай бұрын

    I think this is a key to peace. Good for you.

  • @maddytedesco6084

    @maddytedesco6084

    Ай бұрын

    This is fabulous advice!!!

  • @myggggeneration

    @myggggeneration

    Ай бұрын

    @Azathoth43 -- "Also, life is too short to die on every...." Why is this comment cut off???? Pls add the rest of your comment.

  • @Azathoth43

    @Azathoth43

    Ай бұрын

    Life is too short to die on every hill. Sometimes it's good just to let things go.@@myggggeneration

  • @LuddyFish_
    @LuddyFish_27 күн бұрын

    I always try to stick by this rule of thumb: "You can never prove something. You can only accept or reject it. A majority of cases, you'll have to reject it. And those cases where you accept it, you may have to reject it later on."

  • @t.j.5574
    @t.j.5574Ай бұрын

    We live in a world that is drowning in information, but starving for wisdom.

  • @hSquaredSunshine

    @hSquaredSunshine

    Ай бұрын

    Perfect

  • @altrag3748

    @altrag3748

    Ай бұрын

    information isn't the same as knowledge but yeah

  • @quinngabrielquirubin3430

    @quinngabrielquirubin3430

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@altrag3748exactly the point So much information about this and that, but what do we truly know? Chances are, not much

  • @DeleteMyas

    @DeleteMyas

    Ай бұрын

    You live in a world where sounding dramatic for likes should be considered a profitable job. ...I think that's also called "The news".

  • @t.j.5574

    @t.j.5574

    Ай бұрын

    @@DeleteMyas not about being dramatic. It’s just reality. This has nothing to do with propaganda media.

  • @bunblanche1104
    @bunblanche1104Ай бұрын

    I try living by the mantra: Stay humble, stay teachable, seek the truth and always keep learning.

  • @awesomelegs

    @awesomelegs

    Ай бұрын

    I like this 👍 💯

  • @thebigdog2295

    @thebigdog2295

    Ай бұрын

    A very good outlook for life.

  • @npcimknot958

    @npcimknot958

    Ай бұрын

    Yup.. agree.. learn to take the L.. i think is the best thing.. we don’t always have to be right… and we should question everything its how we get better as a whole.. and if you’re right all the time.. mmmm you’re starting to resemble a certain moustache man

  • @edwardhannah8507

    @edwardhannah8507

    Ай бұрын

    Can't believe I'm defending Indiana Jones 4 here but there's a moment where he says "If you want to be an archaeologist, get out of the library."

  • @user-ol9qu7zi7o

    @user-ol9qu7zi7o

    Ай бұрын

    Amen Brother- Thumb up ... Prof Allright

  • @HumbleBill
    @HumbleBill6 күн бұрын

    So, in short: "If you master debate too much, you could go blind."

  • @marcmarc1967
    @marcmarc196717 күн бұрын

    Intelligence is not Wisdom. Intelligence is not common sense. Intelligence is not kindness.

  • @thereare4lights137
    @thereare4lights137Ай бұрын

    Carl Sagan's message was spot on. Question everything. Encourage children to question all they are taught. It's not about right and wrong. It's about the process of asking why something is the way it is. Ignore those that ridicule you for asking "stupid" questions. Question every part of your reality, and do the legwork to find your own answers. Everything else is a distraction to keep you complacent.

  • @glenpeters9097

    @glenpeters9097

    Ай бұрын

    The signature on my email said Play Fair, Play Nice, and Question Everything. I didn't know I was quoting Sagan... I'm still not sure, I should check. Na, it fits my bias. 🙂

  • @jiggsborah7041

    @jiggsborah7041

    Ай бұрын

    I read somewhere a long time ago that the earth was created for the instruction of the soul. Basically it's a school.

  • @simonthorneycroft1339

    @simonthorneycroft1339

    Ай бұрын

    A distraction from what to make you compliant with what?

  • @robmichael8136

    @robmichael8136

    Ай бұрын

    Thats a decent start. Considering public schools and universities are now modern day indoctrination factories of approved narratives and thought.

  • @rey_nemaattori

    @rey_nemaattori

    Ай бұрын

    And even better regarding ecouraging kids to wonder: a parent having to explain everything gets another chance to analyse their own biases and reasons.

  • @arthurrobey4945
    @arthurrobey4945Ай бұрын

    " Who lack the capacity for the mental gymnastics required to justify such intricate delusions". Suddenly I don't feel so bad. That's a keeper.

  • @bunk95

    @bunk95

    Ай бұрын

    Delusions are fictional. Justify in place of?

  • @samlafontaine8552

    @samlafontaine8552

    Ай бұрын

    ​@bunk95 I think it means to justify their actions taken that were initiated by their delusion. 🤷‍♀️ I could be wrong. Since I'm not sure what you meant 😅

  • @bunk95

    @bunk95

    Ай бұрын

    @@samlafontaine8552 thats not justify. The thought delusion?

  • @ianjamison5460

    @ianjamison5460

    Ай бұрын

    I dispute the term "lack of capacity", there are those of us who have plenty of capacity but refuse to join in the bs games so many play.

  • @omnimetric84

    @omnimetric84

    Ай бұрын

    That phrase caught my attention too. Perhaps replace “justify” with “rationalize”?

  • @tony-winyard
    @tony-winyard13 күн бұрын

    Some thoughts: Positives: - The video raises an interesting and important point - that higher intelligence does not necessarily protect against irrational beliefs and biases. This challenges the common assumption that educating people more will solve the problem of misinformation and delusions. - It provides an engaging explanation for why smart people can fall for "stupid" beliefs, centered around the concepts of motivated reasoning, identity-protective cognition, and using intelligence to rationalize pre-existing beliefs. - The examples used, like wokeism, fat studies, and 19th century racist pseudoscience, effectively illustrate how intelligent people have engaged in elaborate rationalizations throughout history. - The emphasis on cultivating curiosity, humility, and willingness to change one's mind as antidotes to bias resonates as wise advice. Potential Criticisms: - While raising insightful points, the video takes a needlessly combative "us vs them" stance towards the subjects it critiques at times, which could alienate some viewers. - It arguably overgeneralizes about certain fields and ideological leanings in an uncharitable way, painting with too broad a brush. - The explanation relies a bit too heavily on anecdotal examples rather than reviewing the full empirical evidence on the psychology of belief perseverance across the intelligence spectrum. - Some of the historical examples used, while illustrative, also risk oversimplifying complex sociopolitical forces and ideologies. - The proposed solution of cultivating curiosity and humility is reasonable advice, but quite abstract - more concrete strategies could be helpful. Overall, while provocative and raising valid concerns about intellectual honesty, the video's strident tone and lack of nuance in some areas undermine its effectiveness as a measured critique. But it succeeds in spurring deeper thinking about the emotional and ego-protective roots of human belief systems across all intelligence levels.

  • @davidcarter8012
    @davidcarter80129 күн бұрын

    What I've seen is that the more words a person uses to justify a choice or belief, the more likely they are to be deluding themselves. Because of that, I try (and fail) to notice when I'm explaining in great detail a simple idea to myself and ask "am I lying? Is this what lying feels like? Is this thing TRUE?" Not just political things. Multiple choice tests, social relations, etc.: when I second-guess a test answer, the first time was right. And so on. The medium of delusion is words. The medium for understanding is sight.

  • @XenoRaptor-98765
    @XenoRaptor-98765Ай бұрын

    If you ask me what truly makes someone smart is always questioning and challenging what is real.

  • @ephraimwinslow

    @ephraimwinslow

    Ай бұрын

    Smart is understanding and/or picking up a given set of rules taken at face value quickly and intuitively. Wise is slowly but surely extracting a sense of perspective and an internal auditing service from every formative experience you've ever had, and learning to apply the axioms thereof universally. They have very little to do with each other on balance.

  • @ivermektin6874

    @ivermektin6874

    Ай бұрын

    Like how Jaden Smith wonders if our eyes are real?

  • @terracannon876

    @terracannon876

    Ай бұрын

    On top of that, leading with facts and not predefined biases. Someone can always question something sound and find something wrong with it because nothing in the world is absolute, or someone can always go in with an agenda (this happens not just in politics but also in science). But if someone can let the conclusion be data-driven, then the conclusion from the challenge will be more sound as well.

  • @lagrangebees

    @lagrangebees

    Ай бұрын

    What is real? How do you define 'real'? If you're talking about what you can feel, what you can smell, what you can taste and see, then 'real' is simply electrical signals interpreted by your brain. Couldn't resist quoting Morpheus 😁

  • @itsZombieMan

    @itsZombieMan

    Ай бұрын

    “Each of us lives dependent, and bound by our individual knowledge, and our awareness. All that, is what we call reality.” -Itachi Uchiha

  • @bruceli9094
    @bruceli9094Ай бұрын

    Thomas Sowell's book "Intellectuals and Society", explains it perfectly. Smart people think they are better than the rest of us, they think they're anointed, so to speak.

  • @silrana7166

    @silrana7166

    Ай бұрын

    spot on! good mention of his book, thanks! :))

  • @c.galindo9639

    @c.galindo9639

    Ай бұрын

    A bunch of charlatans who self appoint themselves as the way of shaping the lives of others and all of society, that’s what they are

  • @danielc6106

    @danielc6106

    Ай бұрын

    On the contrary. Intelligent people wouldn't necessarily do that. People (stupid and intelligent) with big egos do that. Sowell is quite good at times, but often wrong. He also has a big ego.

  • @locklear308

    @locklear308

    Ай бұрын

    But see, in my mind being that way means you are "not smart". If that makes any sense; I currently lack the right words to fully express it.

  • @craig3567

    @craig3567

    Ай бұрын

    More than likely, you have confused your beliefs with what narcissists believe, which is that they are better than everyone else, et cetera, et cetera. Interestingly enough, narcissistic people come in the full intelligence spectrum.

  • @Devastish
    @DevastishАй бұрын

    I think another reason why intelligent people are more prone to bias is down to how we assess intelligence. Someone who does well in school is deemed "smart". They did well because they were able to learn and grasp the material as presented by the teacher. The less time they spend assessing it, the faster they will internalize it, and the "smarter" they are. In effect, they are "smart" because they are very good at internalizing and recalling whatever the authority figure tells them to. Therefore, when they are learning about politics, they will adopt whatever the authority figure says. To do otherwise is against their nature.

  • @hungrymusicwolf

    @hungrymusicwolf

    Ай бұрын

    Intelligence tests don't have authority figures. We don't measure intelligence by schooling, but by IQ tests. They have plenty of biases on their own, such as that those who create the tests have assumptions in correct / false answers which is a result from education / internalizing societal thought patterns, but those are not a direct result of an authority figure being present.

  • @masterlinktm

    @masterlinktm

    Ай бұрын

    @@hungrymusicwolf whoosh

  • @CreativeCache101

    @CreativeCache101

    Ай бұрын

    @@masterlinktm nah, first comment decided that people deemed 'smart' in school are assessed as intelligent, 2nd comment is just saying thats not how intelligence is assessed, especially when the incentives for doing well in school are very different and just studying hard can make up a big difference, where as traditional IQ tests have no score ceiling (so an intelligent person can stand out beyond the rest) and rarely include fact based questions that can be memorised. this video will be citing studies that specifically use IQ as the metric for intelligence, not how well they did in school.

  • @masterlinktm

    @masterlinktm

    Ай бұрын

    @@CreativeCache101 whoosh

  • @CreativeCache101

    @CreativeCache101

    Ай бұрын

    @@masterlinktm whoosh

  • @SovietReunionYT
    @SovietReunionYTАй бұрын

    This is truly an amazing video. The first 5 minutes set up the viewer to be highly sensitive to persuasive arguments made by seemingly intelligent people in service of a major political bias. Then the creator suddenly switches to feeding the audience seemingly intelligent arguments in service of a very very far-right bias. I suspect the video ends with "I just demonstrated the insidious propaganda I was warning you about, did you catch all of it?", but I'm not going to watch all the way to the end to find out. I'm barely 3 and a half minutes into the mountain of bullshit and I'm already exhausted.

  • @remynettheim4918

    @remynettheim4918

    Ай бұрын

    im so glad theres another rational person in this comment section

  • @kanal7523

    @kanal7523

    Ай бұрын

    I also felt really weirded out when he chose to talk about "wokeism" out of all things that are currently happening and actually have material effects on people (and stem from delusions like the belief in the bible) such as anti abortion laws and trans people's rights, "wokeism" has very little to no material effect on the lives of the average working American, why is that the pressing issue? He compares drapetomania, something an actual physician formulated during slavery times, with "white fragility", a joke term made only to mock people. Anyway, I felt utterly disappointed by that, when he started to talk about wokeism my first reaction was "here we go" but then I thought he was actually going to address it in a similar fashion as the "Carefree Wandering" channel did, but no, its not an actual critique of the problems with wokeism (which professor Moeller does very nicely in his video), its just a biggot ranting, its very reminiscent of Jordan Peterson and his "post-modern neomarxism".

  • @ticklemezellmo

    @ticklemezellmo

    Ай бұрын

    That part about gender seemed to suggest that the creator feels there are really only male and female when we know, in people with XXY sex chromosomes for example, it's not so simple. I agree that "wokeism" unchecked is concerning and saw many instances while I was in college of what he is describing but he should edit this to not sound anti-intellectual.

  • @kashperanto

    @kashperanto

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly! I also stopped watching during that tirade against weak straw men of so-called "wokeism", but my curiosity got the better of me. It does end up backing out and halfway redeeming itself, but that bad taste doesn't go away. The "fair and balanced" look at the far right equivalent of wokeism was not any of the many pressing issues of the far right today, but a look at historical instances of white supremacy and other delusions from the educated elites of those times long past. It is such a shallow and biased attempt at neutrality. I'm simply awestruck at the ability of this person to make a video about a subject that so cluelessly yet clearly applies to the author and contents of the video itself. And I say this as someone who was very far right growing up and into college (I used to watch Glenn Beck after work, and watched only Fox news). I'd call myself a mostly liberal independent now (so a proven track record of humility and curiosity and demonstrated commitment to seeking the truth). I will say that there is absolutely a problem with people using basic sophistry to defend "woke" things and every other thing people argue for. So few people are resistant to sophistry, and the more educated (but not in philosophy) are possibly even more susceptible because they can invent more elaborate bullshit to deceive themselves. I'm a vegan (I know, I'm supposed to start with that 😂), and it is *insane* how much nonsense we get hurled at us from all sides. Appeals to nature, appeals to tradition, appeals to futility, appeals to debunked fringe diets, invalid claims about protein or other easily disproven nutrition information. Sometimes we even loop back to the same fallacy more than once in the conversation. You'd be surprised at how many intelligent people (degreed and competent in technical fields) think that cows just naturally produce milk, and don't need to be repeatedly made pregnant (as they certainly know to be true for other mammals). I feel like I'm debating naïve children most of the time. The mental gymnastics is strong on both sides, but admittedly the liberals take the cake here. And as a single man in the midwest who knows zero vegans irl, I cannot be so easily painted as some virtue-signaling clown who is in it for status. If anything my status is diminished, and while it is not *that* difficult, it is still a constant sacrifice of convenience in the world we live in.

  • @pacldawson

    @pacldawson

    Ай бұрын

    It's funny, how many people in this particular thread suddenly shut off the contents of this video once it started addressing Wokeism... thus becoming examples of that which the narrator describes in the video. Wokeism is an excellent example of the video's thesis, just as the support of slavery was an example. I am amused by how people who are themselves the personification of the issue presented here felt motivated to display their own "issue" here in the comments section. As the narrator says, everyone needs to be vigilant by understanding this issue and trying as hard as they can to avoid falling into that particular trap. Lots of respondents here seem incapable of doing that.

  • @ProjectSoma7
    @ProjectSoma7Ай бұрын

    "To be intelligent is to have a big engine in the car, to be rational is to have a good brake. If you never brake, you'll hit the wall. And if you have a big car, you'll hit the wall hard. You can be extremely intelligent and extremely biased. So above all, be wary of intelligent people more than others, because when they screw up, they screw up harder [...] So be wary of yourself." This is from a French biologist I have seen on KZread some times ago. This video reminds me of this guy and his quote. I find it quite interesting.

  • @slevinchannel7589

    @slevinchannel7589

    Ай бұрын

    KZreadr is utterly clueless - you cant argue with the fact Sociaists have videos literally named 'Top 10 Misconceptions dull dimwits think about Equity' and this video is literally quorting them. Nice dunning kruger effect, extra funny if they talk about 'Smart And Dumb' and hey, hey, hey: whattt a coincidence, this video goes DIRECTLY to state conservative prpagana laughably easy to dbeunk like "WOKE PROFESSORS RULE THE UNIVERSITIESS AND ARE SPREADINGG BAAAD KNOWLEDGE". No, the video has nailed your coffin, firneds and its aptly-named "Science istn Dogma, your just Stupid". Got the spine to finish it? Haha, why am i even asking, of course not. Theres cliamte-change-deniers in the commentsection, attracted by the Narrative here; i rest my case cause that's sooooo obvioussss. This KZreadr i unsubtle bet will say 'Everything wrong ever'. Leftism debunks all this. Science isnt Dogma, your jut Sutpid, fans of this conservative channel. Man, no wonder your Side is going under

  • @LPikeno

    @LPikeno

    Ай бұрын

    As an amateur racer, I'd change it: intelligence is the powertrain, experience is your brake, rationality are your tires and the ground surface is reality. Life is a track, and the single most important upgrade your car needs for a track is appropriate tires. Better brakes fatigue less, higher power accelerates faster, but you are hindered to do anything useful with both without a good grip. We could extend the analogy further with emotional stability (suspension) and personality (aero and chassis dynamics), but it would get too nerdy.

  • @williamw3501
    @williamw3501Ай бұрын

    i was arguing with someone awhile back. he asked, " If you were wrong, would you want to know? if you're honest, explain to me what it would take to change your mind?". broke me as a young man. Now I ask myself that all the time, when examining my own beliefs. I also use those same two questions anytime someone wants to argue or debate. if they can't answer those questions sincerely, i just shake my head and say, " i understand." That has saved me a lot of time and frustration. 👍

  • @g.w.hampton5525

    @g.w.hampton5525

    Ай бұрын

    ohhhhh good questions.. I had to put a comma in the second one to understand but my first thought was to pose them to my daughter since our beliefs are very different but then I had to stop and put them to myself.. this is going to take some thought.

  • @planetvegan7843

    @planetvegan7843

    Ай бұрын

    You sound like you are ready to become vegan.

  • @williamw3501

    @williamw3501

    Ай бұрын

    @@planetvegan7843 lol no. I actually raise buffalo. hopefully ostrich soon.

  • @g.w.hampton5525

    @g.w.hampton5525

    Ай бұрын

    @@planetvegan7843 bleh if you mean me, I tried not eating meat after a traumatic death but I'm a carnivore. My niece said I eat steak like an alligator =))

  • @scarasara

    @scarasara

    Ай бұрын

    Me too my grandpa used to say if u were completely wrong would u want to know? and I always try really hard to understand the other sides opinions and views I really do. And I'm not afraid to admit there are some things I'm on the fence about. We're all still learning we never stop learning and who knows something could happen in one of our lives that could change our whole outlooks, ya know

  • @gam3tam3r
    @gam3tam3r3 күн бұрын

    "The constant interrogation of my own beliefs and motives" is exactly what makes others see me as insecure.... when truth is that I'm anything but... I love learning... but resent it's effect... this... what you've presented... has even more facets beyond what you've described, and I absolutely applaud your efforts... please make more videos.

  • @Gamepwn3
    @Gamepwn314 күн бұрын

    This is somthing ive always sort of understood in the back of my head. Be open to the idea of being wrong, this video helps really re enforce that and gives new light to the mindset that makes it seem less stressful when people combat me on it.

  • @brightmoon7132
    @brightmoon7132Ай бұрын

    Long, long ago now my mom warned me about educated fools. Best advice EVER.

  • @maythewindblow3734

    @maythewindblow3734

    Ай бұрын

    @@loturzelrestaurant and you are the same. :)

  • @timhallas4275

    @timhallas4275

    Ай бұрын

    Educated only means that you have learned many things that may or may not be true. Wise means you have figured out which ones were true and which ones were not.

  • @icusawme2

    @icusawme2

    Ай бұрын

    Intelligence and wisdom don’t always ride in the same cart unfortunately intelligence and education don’t either.

  • @loturzelrestaurant

    @loturzelrestaurant

    Ай бұрын

    @@maythewindblow3734 You just saying that proves nothing but i suppose you dont even know what proof is. Honey, friendly reminder that Conservatism is at War with Science and all sidesk now and admit so except maybe you and this channel here

  • @loturzelrestaurant

    @loturzelrestaurant

    Ай бұрын

    @@maythewindblow3734 You literally just lied about me. What was that meant to show anyone? That your a dunce who cant defend themselves against ANYTHING? What, i dont watch ANY Science-KZreadrs? LOLLLLL, i literally do, hahahha. Iagine just hailmerying the s-it outta the idea of a reply to me. just randomly shooting in the dark and hoping for the best

  • @synthlordvr
    @synthlordvrАй бұрын

    As a tech CEO I’ve hired hundreds of people directly. 99% of the college graduates thought so highly of themselves and were so set in their own ways, they never took the time to learn how to do things OUR way. It didn’t take long before I started favoring those WITHOUT college degrees.

  • @Mr_Folf

    @Mr_Folf

    Ай бұрын

    Certifications + Work Ethic > 4 years of sitting in lectures

  • @Bicyclechris

    @Bicyclechris

    Ай бұрын

    As a person who only has a an Associates degree and yet works for one of the world’s largest tech companies, I wholeheartedly agree.

  • @smania7575

    @smania7575

    Ай бұрын

    I was hired at my tech company for my experience vs my degree. They didn't care I had a degree and never asked me about it. They wanted to know about my experience in the field and how that could bring value to the company. So far, it's one of the best companies I have worked for. I'm seen as an expert in my area and also expected to keep up with the new information emerging in my field. My opinion is valuable, but I also know other people have great ideas and opinions too. Sometimes, another person's idea or opinion is what we go with because it is more sound. That level of thinking doesn't come from degrees, it comes from experience. (Many of us have lots of experience while less than half have degrees)

  • @kathyallen7964

    @kathyallen7964

    Ай бұрын

    I've often heard it's better to hire someone w little to no experience so you can train them to do it a specific way. Overcoming old habits is a challenge, especially if they're so set on being right.

  • @bunk95

    @bunk95

    Ай бұрын

    CEOs are fictional. You think you hired a slave?

  • @user-wj2zv1vd8y
    @user-wj2zv1vd8yАй бұрын

    The narration and the illustrations together are stunning! So glad I found this.

  • @sallywilliams421
    @sallywilliams421Ай бұрын

    'Belief is the death of intelligence. As soon as one believes a doctrine of any sort, or assumes certitude, one stops thinking about that aspect of existence' Robert Anton Wilson

  • @terry9819
    @terry9819Ай бұрын

    As a "leftie" that can't stand wokeism I have given up on trying to discuss issues with so many people. Now I'm just interested in understanding how people think and come to the positions they hold. I see so many people say that free speech is under threat and then in the next breath argue someone should be arrested for saying something they disagree with, it's fascinating. Great video, thanks.

  • @Beingapolymath

    @Beingapolymath

    Ай бұрын

    Damn, that resonated hard. Have you been asked how are you left and not aligned to woke nonsense?

  • @levi5459

    @levi5459

    Ай бұрын

    People are to caught up in being right that they are not thinking about what is right and what might be harmful. They are not thinking. They confuse emotion for thinking and begin to believe that if they can suppress or limit speech for someone they disagree with, somehow that increases their own power in that right but the truth of it is the moment you become successful in limiting any right for those with whom you disagree with you.. You inadvertently limit and handcuff yourself in that right at the same time in the very same way. So, those in power who are intent on deceiving and manipulation work to cause division and infighting amongst ourselves knowing full well that our unity despite our differences is the very thing that they must dismantle first. When it comes to our rights.. To assume I can take yours because we might disagree in some ways would just take away from me in the very same way. It is not a weapon that serves anyone of us well unless and only when we all have it together equally. When we become proud and divide and seek to use that weapon on one of our own just because they don’t believe and see things exactly like you and I and work to use that weapon to strike at that person or group we strike ourselves to and receive the same wounds and bleed out as well. It’s idiocy

  • @asdlom

    @asdlom

    Ай бұрын

    mid-right here, same on both ends of the spectrum. I have friends on the far left and family on the far right, and I just like to observe how their brains work.

  • @jamesgrissom6386

    @jamesgrissom6386

    Ай бұрын

    @@asdlom sounds like nothing is really at stake for you

  • @user-cv3pb7cf9m

    @user-cv3pb7cf9m

    Ай бұрын

    There's nothing wrong with being on the left of the political spectrum. I apparently according to a test i did am more soc-democratically inclined but i don't consider myself an ideologue and definitely dont subscribe to the radical social democratic dogmas and believe they borderline on anarchy

  • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115
    @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115Ай бұрын

    What's the difference between "conspiracy theories" and reality? Now it's just two months.

  • @purple.fantasy

    @purple.fantasy

    Ай бұрын

    Historical data has shown the conspiracy theories are not conspiracy. They are reality as they have slowly unfolded

  • @tomhunter91

    @tomhunter91

    Ай бұрын

    Change the wording around and it doesn't seem so crazy. "He has a theory of a conspiracy" .. interesting isn't it.

  • @paulrichard8474

    @paulrichard8474

    Ай бұрын

    Hey... That's QUOTABLE!!

  • @RunningWithScissors765

    @RunningWithScissors765

    Ай бұрын

    Can’t be a theory if you have evidence, wether factual or circumstantial.. that more than one person is plotting…

  • @jamesgrissom6386

    @jamesgrissom6386

    Ай бұрын

    Honest question - I know we’ve been lied to about pretty much everything, but at what point does it become dangerous to just accept any conspiracy just because it’s a conspiracy?

  • @Govrin.
    @Govrin.Ай бұрын

    Very good video glad yt recommend it to me Just wanna say i love your drawing style a whole lot

  • @nicholascollins4907
    @nicholascollins4907Ай бұрын

    It never occurred to me the connection between humility and curiosity. There’s a lot to delve into there. Your videos are great!

  • @bry10101
    @bry10101Ай бұрын

    My grandfather dropped out of high school, joined the Navy, got a job working in a nuclear reactor after the Navy, did that for 10 years then became the head of maintenance for a massive corporation and retired nicely. The smartest man I have ever known and he didn't even have a diploma or GED. Dude could fix anything. Fro. Reactor parts to small engines to framing a house to tile work. Just built different.

  • @jackierugrat8680

    @jackierugrat8680

    Ай бұрын

    Good for your grandfather. One must admit, luck & privilege were certainly on his side.

  • @72442conv

    @72442conv

    Ай бұрын

    Some of the smartest people I have ever seen are like your Grandfather. They never got a higher education, but their ability to look at problems, break them down, and fix the issue was amazing. They then learned from the fixing of these problems and that has made them better men. I have this innate thing where I love to learn and do things , even if just one time. Having grown up poor also makes you extremely resourceful, which is something that rich people that go to these elite universities will never learn.

  • @joshuagutenberg1901

    @joshuagutenberg1901

    Ай бұрын

    you are blessed to have such a great man for a grandfather. Its too bad he did not run for government. If we had people like him in government, things would not be such a mess.

  • @maverick4255

    @maverick4255

    Ай бұрын

    So either you didn’t understand the video, or you’re just yapping.

  • @janjansen6443

    @janjansen6443

    Ай бұрын

    People now a days will not give you a change, either you have a diploma and expercience or its there is the door. Regardless of skill.

  • @hansle170
    @hansle170Ай бұрын

    10:27 “Teaching about misinformation will make people dismiss facts as disinformation while teaching them logic will make them use it selectively for what they want to believe.” The video is so deep and insightful but finished with simple and practical conclusions. Amazing stuff.

  • @slevinchannel7589

    @slevinchannel7589

    Ай бұрын

    KZreadr is utterly clueless - you cant argue with the fact Sociaists have videos literally named 'Top 10 Misconceptions dull dimwits think about Equity' and this video is literally quorting them. Nice dunning kruger effect, extra funny if they talk about 'Smart And Dumb'

  • @legokirbymanchannel

    @legokirbymanchannel

    Ай бұрын

    @@slevinchannel7589 This response is an example of irony.

  • @slevinchannel7589

    @slevinchannel7589

    Ай бұрын

    @@legokirbymanchannel My reply is literallly refering the 'objective fact' that Conservatives and Right-Wingers have such a blatant War-on-science they literally gotta pretend in a 'rerally transparent, easy-to-deubnk way' that "THE LEFT HATES SCIENCE AN HAS A WAR ON IT", which even this video lowkey refers You think your snarkyness or bad-manners make this reality go away? Honey, you cant tell most ofyour Beliefs to aS Scientist without them laughing you outta the room; face what that means already. Your so sad and pathetic you cant even LISTEN to Science-KZreadrs talking about EVEN NON-political stuff, righhhhttt? ...Let alone Leftist-Channels exploring Conservative-Fuck-Ups like the aptly-named "The GOP-led House is really embarassing-itself"

  • @slevinchannel7589

    @slevinchannel7589

    Ай бұрын

    @@legokirbymanchannel Conservatives and Right-Wingers have such a blatant War-on-science they literally gotta pretend in a 'rerally transparent, easy-to-deubnk way' that "THE LEFT HATES SCIENCE AN HAS A WAR ON IT", which even this video lowkey refers You think your snarkyness make this reality go away? Honey, you cant tell most ofyour Beliefs to aS Scientist without them laughing you outta the room; face what that means already. Your so sad and pat-etic you cant even LISTEN to Science-KZreadrs talking about EVEN NON-political stuff, righhttt? ...Let alone Leftist-Channels exploring Conservative-F-Ups like the aptly-named "The GOP-led House is really embarassing-itself"

  • @slevinchannel7589

    @slevinchannel7589

    Ай бұрын

    Ah, Climate-Change-Denial and countless massive amounts of science-denial: ALl RIGHT-WIng-Staples but you nod your gullable head to a video that couldnt help but sprinkle-in THEIR OWN DELUSIONS, debunked into oblivion by Professor Dave's video "Science isnt Dogma, your just Stupid" into the video

  • @Kineticboy2K1
    @Kineticboy2K1Ай бұрын

    It's like you made this video specifically for me. I've been asking myself these questions and finding myself frustrated at not knowing how to articulate these feelings. I try to be humble and I enjoy being curious, but yes, I can't let myself be complacent that my humility and curiosity shields me from bias.

  • @maorthekinglong

    @maorthekinglong

    22 күн бұрын

    Make your self a rule to listen to both sides and look for truth before you take a position.

  • @Kineticboy2K1

    @Kineticboy2K1

    21 күн бұрын

    @@maorthekinglong Yes. Too many falsehoods being told by too many people for selfish or ignorant reasons.

  • @PammyP
    @PammyPАй бұрын

    I am so very encouraged that 656 thousand people have watched your video. You sound relatively young to have developed such discernment and wisdom and I am deeply encouraged by that. I hope the point was taken that if we don't apply this to ourselves all is for naught. This is about each of us and what we do with this.

  • @Andy-gq5hb
    @Andy-gq5hbАй бұрын

    I remember in the 90s the accusation was always that without religion people would be rational and open-minded. Here we are a few years later as more people have become atheist and those same people have invented the most absurd beliefs and enforce them with fervor upon others. We really are our own worst enemies

  • @bunk95

    @bunk95

    Ай бұрын

    The waste humans marketed as enemies?

  • @polycube868

    @polycube868

    Ай бұрын

    I'd argue that wokeism is the new religion of the 21st century, they certainly act like religious fanatics did, like the bigots who burned Beatles albums because John Lennon said The Beatles were more popular than Jesus...the wokes do the same kinda thing, they "cancel" people for doing and saying things they don't like, they look for things to get offended by (think Satanic panic but in reverse)

  • @lenkamaresova4116

    @lenkamaresova4116

    Ай бұрын

    Religion is not the reason. My country has majority atheist/non-believers, and the current woke AND conservative discourse (USA) is seen as pure nonsense here. On the other hand, most people in my country had enough of societal experiments for a lifetime... Not so in the west. Maybe it's time for forty years of a total shitshow on your part so you can get it out of your system.

  • @binary10balls

    @binary10balls

    Ай бұрын

    You say atheists have invented the most absurd beliefs and enforce them with fervour upon others. Funny, because from my perspective as an atheist, it’s religious people that do this. This cognitive bias is a minefield.

  • @charlesterry2113

    @charlesterry2113

    Ай бұрын

    It’s a common lie people believe that your philosophical/religious beliefs determine your intelligence.

  • @konstiyo
    @konstiyoАй бұрын

    "Being curious makes us humble" that's a great line.

  • @Marci124

    @Marci124

    27 күн бұрын

    I agree because I know I'm both curious and humble.

  • @VodShod

    @VodShod

    18 күн бұрын

    Sadly this video isn't very humble itself. Maybe ask someone who is left leaning about what being woke is about instead of just taking this video's word for it, preferably someone who is actually knowledgeable on the subject. This video is heavily biased and the whole point of it is to setup the strawman at the end.

  • @chaomatic5328

    @chaomatic5328

    17 күн бұрын

    and being humble makes us curious too!

  • @chaomatic5328

    @chaomatic5328

    17 күн бұрын

    @@VodShod it appears you know some stuff about woke, could you explain to me like I'm five? (actually a subreddit name, It's not an insult it just means you need to do... um... in-depth explanation I guess)

  • @VodShod

    @VodShod

    17 күн бұрын

    ​@@chaomatic5328 For people on the left woke is just a term referring to actually paying attention to injustices done to others which you were previously oblivious to. Currently republicans use woke to refer to any situation where a minority is in a position of success, they claim that any minority has to have only succeeded due to "diversity hire", and that any minority that has a job which requires high level of skill must be only there due to "woke ideology". Maybe you can figure out why yourself, it is rather obvious in many cases, in other cases people just are parroting what they heard from other republicans. this is a situation where a group of people with a lot of money and a social network arm create a narrative using a strawman to attempt to muddy the waters and demonize their opponents. An clear example of something like this is: like factory owners from the 1870s spreading propaganda that the push to have emergency escape doors was just an effort to support greedy workers in their organized attempt to steal from the righteous business owners. This video is along the same lines, although it does have the Prager U style of obfuscation which gives half truths and makes leaps of logic to push a certain argument, all while giving a veil that it is discussing something that isn't controversial, they also use round about methods of describing what they are talking about. For instance instead of saying outright that you shouldn't trust experts in their fields you start with how intelligent people have been found to have bias then conflate bias with delusion. Claim that intelligent people are as susceptible to it as ignorant people, then slowly twist that into making it look like intelligent people are much more delusional than any other group, then demonize education and make claims that education is all about supporting delusions, then as a guise of "examples" make strawman arguments towards groups you want to demonize while claiming both sides have issues and never giving any example from a side the maker supports. Then use self help statements about curiosity and being humble and a disclaimer of trying to avoid bias to complete the veil of innocence.

  • @erickbaka
    @erickbaka23 күн бұрын

    So happy to see someone articulate these issues which have bothered me so much for the past 15 years! Also, it made me re-examine my own behavior which does steer toward the argumentative win-at-any-cost side while on Reddit... I've often felt it's not healthy, but this video gave me the push that was needed to try and actually stop it.

  • @joshuathomas6275
    @joshuathomas6275Ай бұрын

    This is one of your best uploads yet, thanks!!

  • @richardskull5279
    @richardskull5279Ай бұрын

    The ego has much to do with intellectual misperceptions. Humble and self aware are key to wisdom.

  • @TheMookie1590

    @TheMookie1590

    Ай бұрын

    Yes. As a kid I was that gifted kid, but so obnoxiously arrogant it makes me cringe. But I was just on the spectrum and my niche obsession was electrical engineering, somehow. Which meant I had to learn advanced concepts at 10 to learn my autistic niche. So I appeared gifted?. Anyway, Because this compound is still hated, or misunderstood by so many. I took LSD when I was 19, it was one of the most important things Ive ever done. It gave me the abilities to be intently self introspective, almost to a fault? I dont think I ever admitted being wrong before this. Im 30 now and still try to work towards my intrinsic being. I not only have no issue admitting being wrong, but I seek it out as an error correcting technique. ITs in the same wavelength as failure. Which ever since I was a child. I knew that failure was nothing more than a tool to learn. It affords you the opportunity to learn, so Ive always embraced it as that. I learned this from electrical engineering as a kid, because you learn more from a failed circuit, than one that works the first time.

  • @mainemavin

    @mainemavin

    Ай бұрын

    @@TheMookie1590 ~~ Your statement of, " you learn more from a failed circuit, than one that works the first time. ", is spot on !

  • @moony77

    @moony77

    Ай бұрын

    Don’t forget curiosity 💜

  • @pmp2559

    @pmp2559

    Ай бұрын

    Something americans lack

  • @bvdswqawe11

    @bvdswqawe11

    Ай бұрын

    not really,ego is about selpreservation;superegis he culprit;using that terminilogy.

  • @wrestlingPC
    @wrestlingPCАй бұрын

    The problem with being humble and curious is that most everyone else is not. You will be an outcast and misunderstood. You must be strong to carry your own convictions. The world does not have to be close minded and selfish, but those in power pump out that nonsense. And the heard, fearing being cast out, will go along with debauchery. "You have to understand, most people are not ready to be unplugged. And many of them are so inured and hopelessly dependent on the system that they will fight to protect it."

  • @TheEmolano

    @TheEmolano

    3 күн бұрын

    Begin humble means keeping for yourself.

  • @thesatiratician7903
    @thesatiratician790316 күн бұрын

    This was an excellent video, very well produced, very thought provoking. Honestly I think I am biased on some things, I find a complete change in location and social circles, the exposure to new opinions and information that it brings, is a good method for shining lights on previously a previously held bias.

  • @morsel9594
    @morsel95946 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much for this video. Recognising my own bias has been a challenge from time to time. This is a great reminder to remain curious rather than dogmatic.

  • @ZenoDovahkiin
    @ZenoDovahkiinАй бұрын

    Bro this video is so real, he's talking about everybody but me!

  • @mennymoto

    @mennymoto

    Ай бұрын

    pfp matches the comment

  • @cattysplat

    @cattysplat

    Ай бұрын

    "Other people are so wrong. Couldn't be me."

  • @Full_Speed_Ahead

    @Full_Speed_Ahead

    Ай бұрын

    I’m kinda glad I’m not smart and very curious

  • @derekrequiem4359

    @derekrequiem4359

    26 күн бұрын

    so true frfr 😭

  • @OrionDeHunter

    @OrionDeHunter

    16 күн бұрын

    Lol, nice one

  • @jasonc5413
    @jasonc5413Ай бұрын

    “One of the painful things about our time is that those who feel certainty are stupid, and those with any imagination and understanding are filled with doubt and indecision.” ― Bertrand Russell

  • @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447

    @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447

    Ай бұрын

    that's a good quote, but it speaks about the opposite phenomenon from this video

  • @Dallows65

    @Dallows65

    Ай бұрын

    That sucks for me because I feel both at all times in varying ratios.

  • @levvayner4509

    @levvayner4509

    Ай бұрын

    I often find that I want to respond to a comment or statement because I disagree. As I start to write a response, I begin to reason if what I write might be a fallacy or based on false information. Often before I am done with my response, I'll chose not to post. Not because I'm intelligent, but because I don't really know.

  • @jasonc5413

    @jasonc5413

    Ай бұрын

    @@slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447 Just because someone is an intellectual it doesn't mean they are not stupid. Some of the most imaginative and understanding people I've known have been of so called "average intelligence".

  • @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447

    @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447

    Ай бұрын

    @@jasonc5413that seems self-contradictory: in order to be an intellectual, you must be intelligent, it's a pre-requisite. and if you have creativity/imagination and understanding then by definition you are intelligent

  • @AMcGrath82
    @AMcGrath824 күн бұрын

    The irony, here, is a person arguing that smart people can fall for conspiracies and moral panic who then proceeds to go through mental gymnastics explaining the "woke" agenda.

  • @AndreaK-ui8gg

    @AndreaK-ui8gg

    4 күн бұрын

    Right?!? How fucking ironic. This channel is DONE!!!!!

  • @BadHorseFly
    @BadHorseFlyКүн бұрын

    Such a refreshing video. You started talking about curiosty and I thought "You're avoiding talking about the ego!" A minute later, there it was.

  • @Fred-yq3fs
    @Fred-yq3fsАй бұрын

    Curiosity and humility are the best tools against dogma and self delusion. Winning arguments does not matter. Let go. Seek truth, grow. Too much education, too much knowledge, not enough character. Bang on! This video is a great service to every watcher. Thanks.

  • @charlesmuller120

    @charlesmuller120

    Ай бұрын

    Spot on Summary!

  • @bunk95

    @bunk95

    Ай бұрын

    Are you slaves being marketed to you as arguing while theyre being tortured and killed?

  • @piotrtoborek2442

    @piotrtoborek2442

    Ай бұрын

    Awesome comment! 99% agree 😉

  • @spddiesel
    @spddieselАй бұрын

    As my dad would often say when things went tits up, "you gotta be pretty smart to do something that stupid." Or another of his favorites, "you know just enough to get all the way into trouble but only halfway out."

  • @jeffputman3504

    @jeffputman3504

    Ай бұрын

    Likewise, "Nothing can be made foolproof, because fools are so ingenious."

  • @Catstronautgirl
    @Catstronautgirl21 күн бұрын

    When I was 11 years old I read Brave New World for the first time and that book made me spiral into a deep fear of authority. From that book I learned that the most dangerous type of authority is the intelligent one, because they're the ones who can convince you of *their* truth. (From there I also developed an aversion of drugs, alcohol, consumerism and government) I uninstalled most social media, only keeping youtube. Something like a key in my brain turned, it taught me to judge the truth. Idk my IQ score, I doubt I'm that smart, but I believe in truth. I have been part of both ends of the political spectrum, from deeply christian conservative, to atheist liberal, now I'm a centrist, a very, very strong centrist libertarian. I make sure to always read both sides of the same argument, especially in extremist cases, they tend to be the most interesting ones that reveal the most information. Doing that I ask myself more questions about my personal biases, (which should be more left leaning given my background), and I can understand the other side of the coin, even if I don't like it. Thank you for this video, it is very good!

  • @peterchadwick1078
    @peterchadwick1078Ай бұрын

    It can be very satisfying to have a subject matter expert explain something so that you walk away feeling a bit smarter - kind of like the satisfaction you get after eating when you've been hungry. Thank you After Skool. Not sure i understood or accepted everything but you fed my bias - and i liked that!

  • @jamesrodgers3132
    @jamesrodgers3132Ай бұрын

    "Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools."

  • @user-en3xy6eh5e

    @user-en3xy6eh5e

    Ай бұрын

    Correct. It's a Spiritual matter. Everyone has a belief of something which determines their understanding of their action, but what belief is true? Examine the beginning of life and death. Truth is known in their understanding.

  • @someone-ke4qj

    @someone-ke4qj

    Ай бұрын

    Finish it

  • @Not_Mussolini_

    @Not_Mussolini_

    Ай бұрын

    Claiming to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.

  • @slevinchannel7589

    @slevinchannel7589

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-en3xy6eh5e Ah, yes, Climate-Change-Denial and countless massive amounts of science-denial: ALl RIGHT-WIng-Staples but you nod your gullable head to a video that couldnt help but sprinkle-in THEIR OWN DELUSIONS, debunked into oblivion by Professor Dave's video "Science isnt Dogma, your just Stupid" into the video

  • @samr.england613

    @samr.england613

    Ай бұрын

    @@Not_Mussolini_Is it wrong for an artist to paint birds and flowers? Grasshoppers and honeybees? If so, how is it okay for Muslims to make humanoid robots in the image of man? Or Christian societies to do the same?

  • @winterbas8927
    @winterbas8927Ай бұрын

    It boils down to Wisdom. Data = Knowledge in all its forms Memory = A store of Data Intelligence = The innate ability to acquire, recall, analyse and produce Data Wisdom = Application of intelligence with good judgement, morals, ethics etc.

  • @willmfrank

    @willmfrank

    Ай бұрын

    Knowledge is owning a book Intelligence is being able to read it. Wisdom is understanding what you read.

  • @peterweston1356
    @peterweston135620 күн бұрын

    I curious why I have never thought that humility and humbleness is the key to learning. This is possibly the best exposition I have heard about why intelligent folk often believe dumb things. I am already checking my own rationalisations. Thank you

  • @bardanation419
    @bardanation41917 күн бұрын

    The bit you mentioned about curiosity is spot on. Anytime I see a sci fi or fantasy movie, tv show, or video game, I immediately get curious about the lore and have to look up every bit of information possible

  • @MrFelipefelop
    @MrFelipefelopАй бұрын

    My granfather was a veteran of WW2,and a Mayor in the UK. when imparting his wisdom,he said always question the middle word in life and always remember there are no pockets in shrouds, words that stuck. A heartfelt thank you to After Skool for your time and effort for your content. Its very much appreciated.

  • @robertoseveno

    @robertoseveno

    Ай бұрын

    Such a great comment to an equal video. Cheers all

  • @thulyblu5486

    @thulyblu5486

    Ай бұрын

    I have no clue what "the middle word" refers to and why one should focus scrutiny on that. Do other words get a pass on scrutiny or what?

  • @robertoseveno

    @robertoseveno

    Ай бұрын

    if@@thulyblu5486

  • @garlic9763

    @garlic9763

    11 сағат бұрын

    @@thulyblu5486 the middle two letters are i and f, if.

  • @thulyblu5486

    @thulyblu5486

    11 сағат бұрын

    @@garlic9763 ah OK it's connected to "Life" and pretending that there is another word in the middle of the word life. Strange train of thought to me, I wouldn't have gotten that without explanation, thanks.

  • @joesouthwell4080
    @joesouthwell4080Ай бұрын

    "For the eye sees not itself." Shakespeare, Julius Cesar It's important to have friends you can disagree with and listen when they disagree with you.

  • @robertkeyes258
    @robertkeyes258Ай бұрын

    I liked this because it confirms my beliefs. Not, more seriously, you've taken some things I've noticed and then put them in a more coherent frame. One of the most serious conversations I ever had with my late father was in the summer of 2012, half a year before his death. In our conversation with this man in his mid 80s, I explained that I had grown up thinking that the most important characteristic of a person was intelligence, and this led me down some dark paths. I now believe that honesty is the most important characteristic. He disagreed, saying that kindness was primary. I've reflected upon that ever since. It's hard to shift one's firmly held beliefs because these make up the core of self-identity, yet there are personal crisisses for which it is required. My father, it seems, either never had such a crisis or never was able to resolve it. I don't want to get too much into my family history, but rather use the difference between us to illustrate the issue. I've am lately pondering that in order to be truly kind, one must first be honest, otherwise there is only flattery with no long-term goal. If intelligence is the highest value, then sociopathy can be allowed to flourish, leading to the decay of society. Intelligence, in modern western society, is thought to be best harnessed by education, particularly higher education in difficult fields. My mother was the first in her family to graduate from college, and my father was the first to obtain a bachelor's degree. Both got degrees in 'hard' sciences, and along with my extended family planned that my siblings and I were to be at least as well schooled as them, and indeed when I graduated, though twenty years late from Harvard, my parents, especially my father beamed like I had never seen him do before. But my degree hasn't helped me achieve much, because it is not specific enough in its focus. I felt as though my parents had achieved something socially through me, which threw the true reasons for my pursuit of said degree into question. Certainly, I had learned much - including some of the skills which have allowed me to be self-reflective and come to the ideas I present here - but much else was thinly veiled programming in order to leverage the value of membership in this elite class. I have resisted such leverage because it is both dishonest and unkind. What, then, is left? an unframed diploma stuffed in a drawer, student debt, and a vague sense of unease about my own education. But these is a bit more that powers me through moments of doubt, and that is exposure to the unknown unknowns, and for that alone, the true nature of higher education has value.

  • @Geschichtelehrer
    @GeschichtelehrerАй бұрын

    My method: Always ask yourself why THE OTHERS could be right and why you still see it differently. In my opinion, this is the best method to outwit your own bias.

  • @Jason-VoluntaryDe-Occultist
    @Jason-VoluntaryDe-OccultistАй бұрын

    Not realizing the difference between believing, thinking, and knowing is a huge problem. There are only two mistakes that one can make on the path to truth: Not starting and not going all the way.

  • @DrSpas

    @DrSpas

    Ай бұрын

    This is great, the 2 mistakes. Well stated Don't forget humility, although arguably is included with going all the way

  • @ThisBloke760
    @ThisBloke760Ай бұрын

    This is so good. I was a builder and would tell the apprenticed to be teachable (humble) and curious. Don’t be afraid to ask questions, the only stupid question is the one you didn’t ask.

  • @stevem815

    @stevem815

    Ай бұрын

    I worry that my apprentice is a bit too full of himself sometimes. He's OK for the moment because he's really obviously incompetent at pretty much everything, so he has to listen... You can see that he thinks pretty highly of himself though and I worry he'll become a PIA once he starts to learn a bit and starts to think he knows everything. IDK what you do about it though.

  • @insoporous9978

    @insoporous9978

    Ай бұрын

    @@stevem815 You can't teach someone who already knows everything. If he thinks he knows something, he won't learn anything new about it. Thing is, it's way too late to teach him a good attitude; his parents were responsible for that. Now you can only hope he decides to learn that on his own. I'd sooner keep around a "dimwit" with a good (teachable) attitude any day of the week. You should too and you already know why. Hope it works out with him.

  • @Heinskitz
    @HeinskitzАй бұрын

    "Education without values, as useful as it is, seems rather to make man a more clever devil." - C.S. Lewis

  • @hellknightmordred7655
    @hellknightmordred765529 күн бұрын

    This video really helped me get the tools I need to look inward at myself. To challenge my beliefs. Thank you so much after skool.

  • @kaunas888
    @kaunas888Ай бұрын

    A place like Harvard is filled with very smart, ambitious and politically careerist folks, so admitting that they might be wrong in a place which is defined by "intelligence" is a heavy pill to swallow. On top of that it is even harder for people to admit their mistakes because they collectively are very good at rationalizing their errors in thought...so a bunch of really smart academics at Harvard cannot possibly be wrong, right?

  • @ankhpom9296

    @ankhpom9296

    Ай бұрын

    Many people from such places like Harvard have been proven to be wrong by others.

  • @jerm8146
    @jerm8146Ай бұрын

    I'm happy that it's finally becoming "safe" to push back against this madness.

  • @wabalubadubdubdub

    @wabalubadubdubdub

    Ай бұрын

    For real the tide is shifting, it better not shift too far

  • @TragedyOfTheDay

    @TragedyOfTheDay

    Ай бұрын

    Is this channel demonetized? I don't recall ads running.

  • @MmntechCa

    @MmntechCa

    Ай бұрын

    Indeed. I think it's gotten to the point where the negative consequences have started impacting a critical mass of people. So concerns can't just be waved aside anymore.

  • @MeatVessel

    @MeatVessel

    Ай бұрын

    It’s ironic that the people that claimed to stand for compassion and inclusiveness made people scared to talk

  • @sonofbr

    @sonofbr

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@wabalubadubdubdub The pendulum has been swinging since the beginning. If left alone, it will eventually stop but it is constantly being pushed about.

  • @davidhannaford5511
    @davidhannaford5511Ай бұрын

    This is such a good video. I have found recently that youtube is going downhill by feeding me videos that feed bias and make me anxious. Feeding bias through the algorithum has the potential to divide society. I wish everyone knew the infomation in this video. It has definitely given me some peace and rest for my mind. Thankyou.

  • @reachtrev69
    @reachtrev69Ай бұрын

    This video helped me understand something I've been stuck on for a long time. Why do smart people fall for these obvious lies and ideologies? You even have the how and what you can do to prevent falling for that trap. Fantastic video.

  • @sciencoking
    @sciencokingАй бұрын

    What has helped me is being on either side of the political spectrum at some point in my life and realizing it's all the same control machine. No politician is your friend, even your favorite one

  • @danielwinter441

    @danielwinter441

    Ай бұрын

    the lesser of the evil's is still evil

  • @samr.england613

    @samr.england613

    Ай бұрын

    But the 'lesser' is STILL less.

  • @fraser9580

    @fraser9580

    Ай бұрын

    But which evil is indeed lesser?

  • @Nylon_riot
    @Nylon_riotАй бұрын

    As someone who envies creatives, I just want to give a lot of credit to the artist of this channel for such original and expressive depictions.

  • @GaZonk100

    @GaZonk100

    Ай бұрын

    absolutely brilliant stuff, but should we heap praise on natural talent?

  • @bunk95

    @bunk95

    Ай бұрын

    Artists from fiction that includes KZread outside of fiction?

  • @nikolaswap
    @nikolaswap5 күн бұрын

    bro really said statements to be true without saying anything other than “doesn’t it feel untrue?”

  • @rwberger6
    @rwberger624 күн бұрын

    If you know you're intelligent, you are less likely to think or accept that you might be wrong, and anything that contradicts your beliefs must be wrong because YOU are the intelligent one and therefore must know more. It's like an extension of the fallacy of appealing to authority but with yourself as the authority.

  • @fbcpraise
    @fbcpraiseАй бұрын

    “Without the right personal qualities more education will not make you a master of your own personal biases, it will only make you a better servant of them.” That’s a quote. Harvard needs to put THAT over the door.

  • @bunk95

    @bunk95

    Ай бұрын

    Harvard is fictional. A place lied about as Harvard should do what?

  • @THall-vi8cp
    @THall-vi8cpАй бұрын

    Two things I tell my kids: 1) A day gone by without learning something, no matter how trivial, is a wasted day. 2) Don't be afraid to be wrong. Allowing ourselves to be wrong can set us on the path to being right.

  • @stevejacobs9320

    @stevejacobs9320

    Ай бұрын

    We often learn more by our mistakes that our successes.

  • @THall-vi8cp

    @THall-vi8cp

    Ай бұрын

    @stevejacobs9320 Absolutely. If we never mess up, never make a mistake, then we never grow or improve.

  • @jankowalski1501

    @jankowalski1501

    Ай бұрын

    there is no way u live a full day without learning something, no matter what you do, who u are, etc. YOu always learn something even if u think u do not, you can learn even when sleeping if u know techniques to remember dreams and if u learn to trust ur intuition that excels during sleeping. You learn reflexes or abilities to solve riddles when u play computer games (which a lot of ppl considers wasting time), you even learn something when ur drunkard drinking whole day - yap, drunkards also have some wisdom in them, for example how to deal with hangover or how to creat alcohol out of nothing, or last longer when drinking :) But hey, it is some knowledge right? Even when u watch TV whole day u can learn something, some concepts u see in TV can make u reavaluate your thinking- even if u watch stupid films, something can trigger a thought in ur brain that will change everything. For me, biggest lessons of my live and the biggest wake up calls came from totally trivial activities and not from studying books etc. I find it that brain cannot be working 100% power to learn really important things, I mean like life changing things. For me it almost always happens when I allow brain just to flow whevrever it wants. So I think u stress ur kids too much about this.

  • @alexandremuise8889

    @alexandremuise8889

    Ай бұрын

    it is impossible to learn if you are always right because being always right means you already "know everything".

  • @ktrimbach5771

    @ktrimbach5771

    Ай бұрын

    Every moment of every day, every action, we are either growing towards God or we are becoming more degenerate.

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