Real_Moldy
6.7K posts

Real_Moldy
@EricRivers61
🇨🇦Thimpker.🦄 Infuriatingly humble Twitter trailblazer.🍁 Settler on Treaty 1 Land. 🧙🚡⛩️🥑 #ForeverNE 🏈🏒⚾⚽🦫🇺🇦☮️🌻 #PureConsciousnesswithoutConcepts
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada Katılım Ağustos 2022
359 Takip Edilen147 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet

@BohuslavskaKate Don't forget to initiate the orbital mind control lasers!
English

@ThatchEffendi This post was fact checked by real Fedaykin followers of Muad'dib.
English

@AesPolitics1 Of course the actual budget is secret, as is the source of funds
English

This is the dumbest fucking idiot ever
FactPost@factpostnews
Trump: The ballroom is under budget and ahead of schedule.
English

Gee...the coward tries to pass off the responsibility
I'm shocked
Covie@covie_93
Axios literally reported that Israeli officials said the strike on South Pars gas field was coordinated with and approved by the trump administration. A U.S. Defense official also confirmed it. Now trump is saying the US had nothing to do with it.
English

@ExploreCosmos_ They got the math wrong
scientificamerican.com/article/the-du…
English

There are people who speak with absolute confidence about topics they have barely explored, as if a few articles or videos were enough to master a complex field. This phenomenon has a name in psychology: the Dunning–Kruger effect, described by researchers David Dunning and Justin Kruger. Its central idea is uncomfortable but revealing: those with low ability in a given area often lack the very skills needed to recognize their own limitations.
In their studies, they found that participants who performed worst in tasks such as logic, grammar, or even humor tended to rate themselves far above their actual level. In other words, the less they knew, the more they overestimated their competence. This is not simply arrogance, but a lack of metacognition, the ability to accurately assess what one knows and does not know. And this is the key point: to evaluate a skill properly, you largely need that same skill.
Later research has shown that this effect becomes more pronounced when the subject is particularly complex or when personal or ideological beliefs are involved. In such contexts, it is common to see individuals with very superficial knowledge in areas like medicine, climate science, or economics expressing themselves with disproportionate confidence, while those who have spent years studying the topic tend to be far more cautious, precisely because they understand the depth and uncertainties involved.
The most important aspect, however, is that this bias does not only affect “other people.” We are all susceptible to it in some domain. We may be highly competent in our professional field while having a completely distorted self-assessment in others without realizing it. Moreover, the effect also works in the opposite direction: those with greater expertise often underestimate their own knowledge, because they are fully aware of how much they still do not know.
At its core, this effect highlights a clear relationship: deep knowledge tends to be accompanied by humility, whereas ignorance, unable to perceive its own limits, often presents itself with a level of certainty that is not always justified.
English
Real_Moldy retweetledi
Real_Moldy retweetledi

Let’s see the evidence, not just the allegations
#gaybaristapaul@PaulSorrentino3
release the tapes for christ sake
English
Real_Moldy retweetledi

@Daractenus @Jones77009368 Imagine joking about history’s tragedies
while holding global power.
What an absolute embarrassment this guy is.
English

@EricRivers61 @karlmehta Hey I’m just following the science. 🤓
English



























