Most of us just want to fit in, and believe what everybody believes.

Coming to your beliefs this way is not actually intelligent. We don’t do it consciously. It’s just tribalism or herding instinct or whatever.

So if everybody agrees with you then that’s a pretty good sign that you are wrong.

  • NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Being contrarian just for the sake of being contrarian doesn’t make one interesting

    Edit: I gotta look at usernames before I comment

    • Free_Opinions@feddit.uk
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      2 days ago

      A contrarian isn’t one who always objects — that’s a confirmist of a different sort. A contrarian reasons independently, from the ground up, and resists pressure to conform.

      • Naval Ravikant
  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    2 days ago

    If I was to say “the sky is blue” and everyone agrees with me, it’s actually because the sky is fucking blue.

    I don’t know how you came to such a wildly bad conclusion. There are other caveats needed to make what you said even remotely accurate. Like if you’re a billionaire and everyone always agrees with you, you’re probably wrong most of the time.

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Things I must be wrong about because everyone agrees:

    Flapping my arms won’t cause me to fly.

    I can’t breathe underwater.

    Washing hands prevents disease.

    Eating food gives us energy.

    Yesterday was Christmas.

    If only everyone was as smart as you. 🙄

  • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Sometimes most people are right. Sometimes most people are wrong. Come to your own conclusions as independently as possible from what other people think. It’s just as much a fallacy to assume the majority of people are wrong as to assume they are right.

    And some things aren’t even objectively true or false, they are just personal preferences or morals.

    • infinite_ass@leminal.spaceOP
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      2 days ago

      But independent thinking contradicts my 1000000 years of genetically programmed tribal instinct. You’re asking a lot.

    • infinite_ass@leminal.spaceOP
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      2 days ago

      Yes.

      But to elaborate my point.

      The path of conformity and the path of reason are utterly different things. Therefore they lead to utterly different ends. Therefore if you find yourself in agreement with everybody then in all probability you have arrived at that other end and you didn’t get there via reason.

      (Ok so I said it twice now.)

      • Sabre363@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        Not contradicting anything you said or trying to make an argument, just thought it would be a cool thing to share and let people learn about.

        But if you do want some kind of argument, then I would say that while you are not wrong here, conformity has basically nothing to do with drawing reasonable conclusions and that really isn’t it’s purpose. Conformity is almost more of a defense mechanism (which can go wrong rather easily, hence this discussion) meant to keep us comfortable and prevent accidentally painting a social target on our own backs. It’s when conformity is conflated with logical reasoning that we start to get problems.

      • lugal
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        2 days ago

        You make it sound quite linear. There are more than 2 ends so there isn’t “that other end”. Your social group might not see birds as dinosaurs but that doesn’t make them governmental drones either

  • PorradaVFR@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    It depends vastly on the subject, audience and source of information.

    I’m not going to disagree with a room of experts aligned on a conclusion based on data and verified study. Actual knowledge is in fact knowledge and a contrarian opinion, no matter how passionately expressed, is not equivalent to it.

    Being contrarian solely to go against the popular position is laughably simplistic.

    Everyone knows this.

    (☞゚ヮ゚)☞

    • socsa@piefed.social
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      People who don’t understand science don’t get this. When science changes it doesn’t mean the previous ideas were “wrong” - it usually just means that the framework and the data it is built around was incomplete or imprecise. That’s the entire premise of empiricism, and why there are differences between how theory, fact and axiom are handled.

      Far too many people believe that the history of overturned consensus suggests that modern consensus is also “wrong” when it was the empiricist framework which discovered both “truths” in the first place.

  • themurphy@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Must be hard to come around math, science and in general facts for you. We all agree on how it works, so it must be wrong?

    • Crogdor@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      That’s just Big Cute propaganda. The puppy-kitten industrial complex has brainwashed us all. Have you even considered that tarantulas and anglerfish might be the true standard of cuteness?

  • TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    I think you’re confusing a few things here, but that’s ok. After all, it’s a shower thought, not a thesis.

    Whether people agree or disagree with you is not a good indication of you being right or wrong. it could be either way in both cases.

    When people think the same way as you do, they tend to agree with you. They might think that way, because you’re really convincing or because they see the world the same way you do. In either case, you could still be right or wrong.

    It’s also possible that people appear to agree with you even though they don’t actually think like you do. See dictatorships for more info on that situation. As usual, this has nothing to with who is right and who is wrong.

    Regardless, you touched upon an important point. Humans are social animals, and tribalism causes all sorts of weird behavior, such as rejecting your own conclusions and going with the flow. In a hunter gatherer society, your life literally depends on the group, so you better stick together. In a modern society, we still need each other, but more indirectly.

    If everyone agrees with you, take that as a warning sign that they might be acting on tribal instincts. Act responsibly, because your decisions could affect the people around you.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    2 days ago

    Critical thinking skills are required, to really know if you’re right or wrong. Just going by what is common and doing the opposite, or doing what is common, is not enough.

    The entire scientific method is designed so that people can verify if they are wrong or right, through falsifiable hypotheses, simply debating and using rhetoric to try to decide truth often leads to incorrect conclusions, if not outright falsehoods. However, the burden of proof is on the person with the new theory, not everybody else to prove the new theory is wrong