Randomness (
randomness) wrote2013-04-09 05:47 pm
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You can't make a lot of progress trying to figure out human behavior unless you start from the premise that people are not rational but their actions can follow some observable patterns.
That premise tends to derail observers who assume rationality. They often have difficulty getting their analyses back on track. Worse off are those who refuse to incorporate human irrationality and proceed to build a theoretical structure on false premises.
My own understanding of people improved enormously after I understood this.
That premise tends to derail observers who assume rationality. They often have difficulty getting their analyses back on track. Worse off are those who refuse to incorporate human irrationality and proceed to build a theoretical structure on false premises.
My own understanding of people improved enormously after I understood this.

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I wish I'd figured this out long ago. It would have helped me make more sense of high school.
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Your perceptions may differ, but this post is about my understanding.
*Not that I think any one of us is the yardstick by which to measure perfect rationality.