**Illusions of causality: how they bias our everyday thinking and how they could be reduced**
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00888/full
*Illusions of causality occur when people develop the belief that there is a causal connection between two events that are actually unrelated.*
*We cannot think of a better safeguard against the illusions of causality than scientific thinking, which involves skepticism, doubt, and rigorously applying scientific methods, particularly the experimental approach.*
- How to Assess the Illusion
- The Probability of the Outcome
- The Probability of the Cause
- Cause-Outcome Coincidences
- Maximizing the Outcome vs. - Testing the Causal Relationship
- The Cost of Action—Secondary Effects
- Depression
- Personal Involvement
- When There are Several Potential Causes
- Aversive Conditions: Just the Other Way Around?
- Developing an Educational Strategy
How to decrease likelihood of experiencing illusions of correlation or causality:
- Knowing when and how to use skepticism and critical thinking skills.
- Relying on scientific methods that can assess causality.
- Learning how to think scientifically.
- Be vigilant and detect your own interpretations of causality.
- Understanding the importance of controlling for extraneous variables.
- Staying informed about potential alternative explanations for an event.
- Understanding that causality cannot be assessed by quick intuition.
- Actively or passively observing the effects of removing or reducing the perceived cause of an outcome.
- Attempt to complete information of instances when perceived causes and outcomes co-occur and do not co-occur.
- Running an experiment to test the effects of one variable on the outcomes of the other variable.
- Distancing ourselves from situations in which we are personally involved.
- Allow objective or neutral observers to help judge for causal relationships.
@choutos does me "believing in god" because i think "if universe is always expanding. It certainly real that all the thing in universe were most likely to be at singularity at some point in the past and then something just messed with the singularity which causing it to explode and keep expanding. Which means there's should be an entity that most likely to make, start or involved in that process."
Count as illusion as well ?
@ravenclaw No. I would say that's more in the realm of metaphysics as it's something we cannot prove or disprove.
@choutos thanks! I don't know if i'm going to be happy or sad with that answer.
But cheers anyway!
@ravenclaw preach :V
@choutos
@ravenclaw I say go forth and preach :V
young... father... pope?
@ravenclaw Why not? Religions proved to be a good business.
@ravenclaw not much to do other than being aware, I guess. Also from time to time "yelling" at people who try to assert their religion disguised as science.
@choutos