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A meta-bias where people with the least expertise in a subject are the most confident that their perspective is the unbiased, objective one. Because they don't know enough to understand what they don't know, they mistake their own ignorance for a clean, uncontaminated vantage point. Experts, weighed down by complexity and nuance, seem "biased" to them precisely because experts acknowledge uncertainty and competing interpretations. The Dunning-Kruger Objectivist believes their empty cup is actually the clearest lens.
"I'm not a historian, so I can look at this war objectively without all that academic bias," tweeted a guy who learned about the conflict from a viral meme. Dunning-Kruger Objectivity Bias: when ignorance cosplays as clarity.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
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A cognitive bias where genuine expertise leads to self-doubt, hesitation, or uncharacteristic errors—the opposite of the classic Dunning-Kruger effect (where incompetents overestimate themselves). The Inverted Dunning-Kruger Effect describes experts who, precisely because they know how much they don't know, become paralyzed by uncertainty. They see complexities that novices miss, which can lead to overthinking, second-guessing, and sometimes mistakes that a less knowledgeable person wouldn't make. The expert's curse: knowing enough to doubt yourself, not enough to be certain.
"The junior developer confidently coded the feature in an hour. The senior architect spent three days agonizing over edge cases, then made a mistake from overcomplicating it. Inverted Dunning-Kruger Effect: expertise bred hesitation, and hesitation bred error. Sometimes knowing too much is its own kind of ignorance."
by Dumu The Void March 5, 2026
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