These days, it seems like there's more arguing over what counts as a "fact" and what counts as an "opinion" than should ever be necessary. Well, we have bad news. The trouble doesn't start with "fake news" — it starts in your brain.
menu
Personal Growth
Your Brain Involuntarily Sees Opinions You Agree With as Facts
3,272
These days, it seems like there's more arguing over what counts as a "fact" and what counts as an "opinion" than should ever be necessary. Well, we have bad news. The trouble doesn't start with "fake news" — it starts in your brain.
Your
Biased Brain
We already know that your interpretation of facts can vary wildly depending on your beliefs. Confirmation
bias and the
backfire effect are
always going to shape the
way you interact with your
world. But according to a
new report on a phenomenon known as involuntary opinion confirmation, you might have a hard time sorting out the facts in the first place. That's because when your brain is exposed to an opinion it agrees with, it automatically slips it into the "facts" folder of your mental filing cabinet.
Only your opinion is the lowest
sign of
intelligence if you can't share a open minded opinion or
fact rather withdraw your statement