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Moazzam 👑
Moazzam 👑
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Sunday 28 June 2026 12:04:12 GMT
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Do you know how a toilet works? Do you know how a zip works? Or a bicycle? On the face of it, these things are obvious because we use them all of the time.  And yet, in 2002, the psychologist Rozenblit and Keil noticed something strange. They asked participants to rate how well they thought they knew how something worked, and then they got to explain that thing step by step. And what they found was that people just ran out of words. They couldn't explain it. And it turns out that this happened all of the time, and it's known as the illusion of explanatory depth. We feel we understand the world in far more detail than we actually do. You've probably watched a toilet flush a thousand times. And so, you might think you can explain the mechanism, but when you sit down to actually try, you'll get lost somewhere around the float valve.  But this isn't just about everyday technologies. This is about big things like immigration, taxation, vaccines, and war. We mistake a familiarity with an understanding. We've heard these words so often that we think we understand what's going on, but as a general rule, the less somebody actually knows, the more confident they are. But there is some good news to come out of this, because the researchers found that when people are asked to explain a contentious policy or idea in real detail, and not just argue for it, they became less sure of themselves. They became more moderate and more willing to accept alternative opinions and explanations. Nobody told them that they were wrong. They just heard themselves running up against the limits of their own knowledge.  So, if you meet somebody with an incredibly strong and an incredibly certain opinion, you don't need to argue or debate them. You just need to ask them calmly to explain what they think is going on.
Do you know how a toilet works? Do you know how a zip works? Or a bicycle? On the face of it, these things are obvious because we use them all of the time. And yet, in 2002, the psychologist Rozenblit and Keil noticed something strange. They asked participants to rate how well they thought they knew how something worked, and then they got to explain that thing step by step. And what they found was that people just ran out of words. They couldn't explain it. And it turns out that this happened all of the time, and it's known as the illusion of explanatory depth. We feel we understand the world in far more detail than we actually do. You've probably watched a toilet flush a thousand times. And so, you might think you can explain the mechanism, but when you sit down to actually try, you'll get lost somewhere around the float valve. But this isn't just about everyday technologies. This is about big things like immigration, taxation, vaccines, and war. We mistake a familiarity with an understanding. We've heard these words so often that we think we understand what's going on, but as a general rule, the less somebody actually knows, the more confident they are. But there is some good news to come out of this, because the researchers found that when people are asked to explain a contentious policy or idea in real detail, and not just argue for it, they became less sure of themselves. They became more moderate and more willing to accept alternative opinions and explanations. Nobody told them that they were wrong. They just heard themselves running up against the limits of their own knowledge. So, if you meet somebody with an incredibly strong and an incredibly certain opinion, you don't need to argue or debate them. You just need to ask them calmly to explain what they think is going on.

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