Hossenfeffer
Diamond Member
- Jul 16, 2000
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Originally posted by: thomsbrain
social psychologists have found there is a cognitive mistake so prevalent, it's called it the Fundamental Attribution Error.
basically, we tend to think that people do things because of who they are, rather than external influences.
i.e.: that guy cut me off because he is an asswipe, not because he didn't see me. that guy is driving 90 MPH because he thinks he owns the world, not because his wife is at the hospital giving birth. that lady ran the red light because she's too stupid to drive, not because at that moment her kid crapped his pants in the back seat and started screaming.
it's not just driving, of course: poor people are lazy, not unlucky. when i said hello to that woman at the coffee shop, she didn't say hello back because she's a bitch, not because she was having a bad day.
we make these mistakes so often and so predictably, it's scary. and they pretty much explain why we get so pissed off at each other when we're driving. driving simply puts us in a situation where we get into a lot of conflicts and have absolutely no information on the other person's reasons for their actions, so we always assume it's because they are stupid/mean/aggressive/etc.
QFT.