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  • Imagine you're at a party, there are a couple of dozen guests,

  • what are the chances that two of them will have the same birthday?

  • The answer is, better than even.

  • If the party had 60 guests,

  • then chances would be greater than 99%.

  • It's an example of how we often are too impressed by coincidences,

  • because we forget about how many ways there are

  • for coincidences to occur.

  • The tendency to see meaningful connections

  • between completely unrelated things

  • is what psychologists call apophenia.

  • It means we often see patterns in random information,

  • and this can be deeply problematic.

  • When we hallucinate things that aren't there,

  • we can make foolish decisions.

  • We can imagine that there are conspiracies

  • because several bad things happen in a row.

  • We can believe in malevolent deities

  • because we underestimate how easy it is for misfortunes to cluster.

  • We can be victims of the 'gambler's fallacy',

  • and think, for example, that if the roulette wheel has landed on red

  • six times in a row, it's due for a black,

  • even though, of course, the roulette wheel doesn't have a memory

  • and a desire to play fair.

  • The 'gambler's fallacy', also known as the 'Monte Carlo fallacy',

  • is the incorrect belief that a past event will influence

  • the outcome of a future event.

  • So why do so many of us fall for it?

  • The whole point of having a brain

  • is to figure out what's going on in the world.

  • That's a useful thing in a natural environment,

  • because we don't have a direct wire from our brain to reality,

  • we're always interpreting patterns.

  • We see shapes hidden, partly obscured by leaves,

  • we see fish under the surface of the water,

  • we always go beyond the information given.

  • But it does mean that we can overshoot

  • and interpret things that aren't actually there.

  • Not just in the realm of visual shapes,

  • but in the realm of events.

  • This failure to appreciate randomness can lead to all sorts of problems.

  • It can lead some people to dismiss climate change

  • after a record cold day,

  • when in fact, if they were able to step back

  • and look at the overall trend,

  • it would be clear that it was a completely normal,

  • if random, fluctuation.

  • And that can lead us to attribute meaning

  • to totally unrelated life events.

  • When events happen randomly in time,

  • they often fall into clusters,

  • because there is no process that's trying to space them apart.

  • That's something that is very hard for us to appreciate.

  • Now when it comes to events in our lives

  • that might be distributed randomly in time,

  • from the perspective of our minds seeking patterns,

  • they seem to come into clusters, and so we may believe

  • that bad things happen in threes, that God is testing our faith,

  • that we're born under a bad sign.

  • Another common illusion is prior probability,

  • sometimes called the 'Texas sharpshooter fallacy',

  • after the marksman who fires a bullet into the side of a barn

  • and then draws a bullseye around the hole afterwards.

  • There's the story about the stock market adviser

  • who sends out several thousand newsletters,

  • half of which predicted that the market will go up,

  • and half that predicted it would go down,

  • he then discards the names on the mailing list

  • who happen to get the incorrect prediction.

  • Well, you can see where this is going.

  • After a year, there'll be a certain remainder who will think this guy

  • is a genius.

  • It's a fallacy that we are all prone to,

  • it's why we are often impressed by psychics and soothsayers

  • whose predictions are amazingly accurate,

  • after they've occurred, we tend to forget all the false predictions.

  • So if we know that we are prone to falling for these delusions,

  • to seeing patterns that aren't there,

  • what can we do about it?

  • An awareness that we are all vulnerable to fallacies

  • and illusions, biases, doesn't mean we should just fatalistically

  • throw up our hands and say humans are irrational

  • and therefore we need some kind of benevolent despots

  • to make decisions for us,

  • that democracy was a big mistake.

  • Probably none of us is that wise

  • that we can notice our own fallacious thinking,

  • we're often very better at noticing the other guy's fallacious thinking.

  • And we can harness that ability

  • in communities that have free speech, open debate, an adversarial process,

  • checks and balances, editing, fact checking,

  • so that one person's mistaken first impression,

  • their illusory snap judgement,

  • can be spotted by someone else, and the community as a whole

  • implements the most reasoned decision.

Imagine you're at a party, there are a couple of dozen guests,

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