What is Cognitive Bias?
Cognitive bias is the mind’s built‑in tendency to think in certain predictable, skewed ways instead of purely logically.
Cognitive bias is the mind’s built‑in tendency to think in certain predictable, skewed ways instead of purely logically.
Perceptual bias is the mind’s habit of seeing things in a tilted way instead of seeing them completely accurately.
Perception filtering is the mind’s way of sorting and reducing the huge amount of information coming in through the senses so a person is not overloaded.
Perception is the mind’s way of taking in information through the senses and turning it into an understandable picture of “what’s going on.”
Belief is what the mind accepts as true, whether or not it is actually proven. It is the feeling of certainty, about an idea, or person.
A paradox is a situation or statement that seems to contradict itself, but still has some truth in it. Most truths end in paradox.
Reality is the way things actually are, not how they are wished for, imagined, or feared. It includes everything that truly exists and happens
Seeking a balanced view means trying to see a situation from more than one side instead of only from one extreme.
Decision-making is the mental process of choosing one option from several possibilities. It is what happens when we ask – “What should I do?”
Using a premise of a fact to think about future possibilities is something you know, or choose to assume, is true now, as a starting point