Thread: Veritas
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Old 12-20-2018, 01:19 PM   #77
dull boy
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Originally Posted by veritas View Post
That’s what I thought you would say. But that is why you fail. This is another of your weaknesses. And you are only proving my point.

Since you are going and quoting my posts go back a couple of on the ago to where i correctly pegged you as the patient who thinks they are smarter than their therapist.


Since you cannot prove that you are, you now have to try and lessen me. Which is why you follow me around making. Snide comments like a teenager. Good luck.

I know you better than you know yourself.
In the field of psychology, the Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people of low ability have illusory superiority and mistakenly assess their cognitive ability as greater than it is. The cognitive bias of illusory superiority comes from the inability of low-ability people to recognize their lack of ability. Without the self-awareness of metacognition, low-ability people cannot objectively evaluate their actual competence or incompetence.[1]

As described by social psychologists David Dunning and Justin Kruger, the cognitive bias of illusory superiority results from an internal illusion in people of low ability and from an external misperception in people of high ability; that is, "the miscalibration of the incompetent stems from an error about the self, whereas the miscalibration of the highly competent stems from an error about others."[1]
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