1) Confirmation bias and believe bias sort of go hand in hand. You tend to have beliefs and easily believe things that support those beliefs. Confirmation bias are choices that you make automatically or without much thought based on your belief bias. Science reports show that most people make decisions 20 to 40 minutes before they even know there is a decision to make. Like perhaps they come into the room and see donuts. they instantly decide whether they're going to have one or not though they may resist for an extended period of time.Cnsl1 wrote: ↑Fri Nov 27, 2020 8:56 am I am curious about something.
I wonder if everyone who is contributing vociferously to this thread would answer these three questions:
1). What is confirmation bias and the belief bias effect?
2). How does confirmation bias affect one's opinion and belief?
3). How do *I* best guard myself against confirmation bias?
Yes, I will consider and answer these questions too.
2) confirmation bias is a subconscious process. But then so our beliefs. When something comes up your mind already decides what choice it will make based on beliefs that you have. You having a discussion or writing in your journal about it is a secondary function of the confirmation bias. But the confirmation bias happens without you thinking about it and is extremely difficult to override.
The best defense of getting trapped in illusions based on this phenomenon of the human mind is to have principles that are not necessarily biased. Like believe in hearing both sides. Believe in being fair. If you believe that your side is right then there is no way that your confirmation bias could allow you to see a different point of view.
You may know someone in your life that you trust to settle an argument because you know their belief bias is in a neutral principle such as fairness or hearing both sides.
3) as I mentioned before put your belief in neutral or good principles. Believing that there is good in all people for example is perhaps a safer bias than thinking that everybody lies. I sort of do both but.....
Believing in correct principles allows people to observe the merits of a situation without making a choice or confirmation bias action until you have heard the evidence. If your belief bias requires more information before you allowed that confirmation bias to kick in then you are more likely to be just. But if your belief bias leans in One direction such as, "those are bad people," all confirmation bias will simply confirm that.
Before 2016 I had some unhealthy belief bias. I believe that people are basically good and would not allow something bad to happen within our government. I have had to nail that particular belief on the cross. A better belief this that all politicians lie but look at what they achieve to know what their intent is.
This has led to me dividing people into several groups. Of course there is confirmation bias all the time when I see them act. But deeper research usually confirms what I suspected. That could be a mine trap of sorts, but we are merely mortal and cannot know it all.
Great questions.