I’m not sure how or why this Wikipedia entry made it onto
the Monday Morning Links at the Maggie’s Farm blog, but I am happy it did.
The link takes us to a page about psychological research
into what is called the Dunning-Kruger effect.
David Dunning and Justin Kruger offered a thesis about the
relationship between one’s actual competence and one’s estimation of one’s
competence. See articles here and here.
To put it briefly, incompetent people tend systematically to
overestimate their competence. Perhaps we should not be surprised to discover that such
people are not even competent at evaluating their own incompetence.
Since incompetent people do not know they are incompetent,
they do not try to overcome their incompetence. Being near-fanatical about
their belief in their own competence, they have the greatest difficulty
overcoming their incompetence.
By extension, competent people know what they do not know
and therefore are constantly striving to improve their competence.
Happily enough, the Wikipedia entry offers some earlier
versions of the same idea. Psychologists proved the point a dozen or so years
ago. Great minds seem always to have known it.
For example:
Confucius: “Real knowledge is to know the extent of one's
ignorance."
Bertrand Russell: “One of the painful things about our time
is that those who feel certainty are stupid, and those with any imagination and
understanding are filled with doubt and indecision."
Charles Darwin: “… ignorance more frequently begets
confidence than does knowledge."
What does it all mean?
It might be telling us that those who have acquired real knowledge
and competence have had to work at it. They know the joy of acquiring knowledge
and competence by working at it, and thus, they are more likely to be more
humble about their abilities. Don’t humility and doubt motivate people to keep
on learning?
It might also be telling us that people who lack competence
try to compensate by masking their inadequacy with a near-delusional
belief in their own ability.
If they believe that they know more than they know they will
be telling themselves that they need not work to learn more. Then again, their
arrogant belief in their competence might have made it more difficult for them
to put in the time and effort to acquire real competence.
A humble person is more likely to work harder to achieve
competence. The arrogant person is more likely to rest on his laurels.
In principle, Dunning explains, people learn about their
level of confidence by getting good feedback from others. They will strive to
improve themselves when they see others doing better than they are.
This works well for people who are competent. They have a better accurate assessment of what they know and what they do
not know. Those who are incompetent have far more difficulty overcoming their
failings because they refuse to recognize that anyone is better than they are.
When faced with someone who has real skill, incompetent people refuse to
recognize it. Here is an instance where setting a good example, becoming the
kind of person that others will want to emulate, does not work.
Dunning explained it in a New York Times interview:
… people
at the bottom, if you show them what other people do, they don’t get it.
They don’t realize that what those other people are doing is superior to what
they’re doing.
Dunning suggests that the best way to form an accurate
self-assessment is to key off the feedback you get from other people. You will
never know your competence level if you rely on how you feel about yourself.
In his words:
The
road to self-insight really runs through other people. So it really depends on
what sort of feedback you are getting. Is the world telling you good
things? Is the world rewarding you in a way that you would expect a competent
person to be rewarded? If you watch other people, you often find there
are different ways to do things; there are better ways to do things. I’m
not as good as I thought I was, but I have something to work on.
One might say that competence is dynamic while incompetence
is static. Those who know what they know and know what they don’t know feel
that they are competent to learn more. Those who do not know what they do not
know lack confidence in their ability to learn anything at all.
They might well consider themselves and their views to be of
equal value to everyone else’s. Isn’t that what democracy is all about? Thus
they will become opinionated fools, unwilling and unable to acquire any
knowledge or competence.
Dunning said:
Psychologists
over the past 50 years have demonstrated the sheer genius people have at
convincing themselves of congenial conclusions while denying the truth of
inconvenient ones. You can call it self-deception, but it also goes by
the names rationalization, wishful thinking, defensive processing,
self-delusion, and motivated reasoning. There is a robust catalogue of
strategies people follow to believe what they want to, and we research
psychologists are hardly done describing the shape or the size of that
catalogue. All this rationalization can lead people toward false beliefs,
or perhaps more commonly, to tenaciously hang on to false beliefs they should
really reconsider.
Let’s say that you are a politician and want to persuade a group of people to vote for a different political party. If these people are basically
ignorant, it will be very difficult to entice them to change their minds without letting them
feel that they have been foolish to vote as they did?
Apparently, it’s easier to continue doing as they did and
remaining convinced that they are competent than to accept that they have been
fooled, even tricked into voting against their own self-interest.
If you pretend to know more than you do, even about your own
self-interest, you will reject anyone who questions or challenges your
competence. Better to livean illusion than to accept that you
look like a fool.
Self-esteem musssst NOT be challenged!
ReplyDeleteSummary of The Black Swan, Nassim Taleb: "People are very good at fooling themselves into thinking they know much more than they do, which makes it easy for big, unusual events to surprise us."
ReplyDeleteSelf-esteem is so real that it's fleeting. And that's why it remains real for people who judge their own self-worth in one-minute increments. Such people are hopeless. We cannot minister effectively to them. It's a bottomless pit… er. a vacuum. Yet our education system is geared to support this very thing that they cannot. And we wonder why things are not going well in public education?
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Let us begin to share knowledge to improve the quality of intelligent and advanced society. A lot of things we need to learn to achieve success
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