Here’s a great example of cognitive dissonance immediately after the trigger. Observed reality stopped matching the movie in Ben Rhodes’ head and you can watch him try to reboot his mind. Fascinating.https://twitter.com/columbiabugle/status/1001706901795721216 …
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I figured you were on it. Carry on, sir. I look forward to the Periscopes. It'll be healthful all around. Generous mental energy spent on Dale's behalf is good for him and for the audience's cognitive flexibility. No down side. Thanks for what you do.
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My friends think the monster is always seconds from destroying them and the world. They're in constant short-term thinking mode. My perception of time is longer and slower. I want to ask "what problem do you have now, not 10 min. from now?" We don't experience time the same.
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Isn't a big part of it not being made to feel stupid for where you were? Having somebody convince you out of something you believe in strongly is humiliating by default. Is there a good way to avoid that?
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This is where devising a strategy where "everyone wins" would really help. However, some things just need to be broken before they can be fixed (health care system, national debt). Confirmation Bias allows me to see that Trump appears to be working both strategies at once!
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