What is the Survivorship Bias? The Survivorship Bias refers to the tendency for individuals to focus on the successes or survivors of a particular event, process, or situation, whileignoring or downplaying those who failed or did not survive. This bias can occur in various contexts, such as: Examples of the Survivorship Bias The Survivorship Bias […]
Cognitive Bias: Selection Bias
What is the Selection Bias? The Selection Bias refers to the tendency for individuals to selectively focus on certain pieces of information that support their existing beliefs, while ignoring or downplaying other data that contradict those beliefs. This bias can occur in various ways, such as: Examples of the Selection Bias The Selection Bias can […]
Cognitive Biases: Salience Bias
What is the Salience Bias? The Salience Bias is a type of cognitive error that arises from the way our brains process information. When we encounter an event or piece of information that is striking, unusual, or emotionally arousing, it tends to stand out in our memory and receive more attention than other, less salient […]
Cognitive Biases: Implicit Association
What is Implicit Association? Implicit Association is a cognitive phenomenon where people automatically link two or more concepts together, often without realizing it. This can occur through repeated exposure, cultural influence, personal experiences, or learning. These associations are thought to be implicit because they operate beneath our conscious awareness, influencing our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors […]
Cognitive Biases: Attentional Bias
What is the Attentional Bias? The Attentional Bias refers to the tendency for people to direct their attention towards certain stimuli more than others. This can occur due to variousfactors, such as: Theories behind the Attentional Bias Several theories attempt to explain why people exhibit an Attentional Bias: Examples of the Attentional Bias The Attentional […]
Cognitive Biases: Frequency Illusion
What is the Frequency Illusion? The Frequency Illusion, also known as the “Availability Heuristic” or “Recency Bias,” occurs when people rely on readily available information in their memory rather than on objective facts. This heuristic (mental shortcut) leads them to overestimate the frequency of an event based on how easily examples come to mind. Example […]
John Locke “The Second Treatise Of Government” – LLama3.3 70b
The “Second Treatise of Government” is a 1689 book written by John Locke, an English philosopher. In it, Lockeoutlines his thoughts on the role and limits of government. Here’s how he envisioned the impact of his ideas ongovernment: Main Effects: Key Consequences: Influence: The “Second Treatise” had a significant impact on Western philosophy, influencing thinkers […]
Immanuel Kant and “Critique of Pure Reason” Change in Reasoning and Communication – LLama3.3 70B
How does the book “The Critique of Pure Reason” change the way pure reasoning should be changed according to the author? Immanuel Kant’s magnum opus, “Critique of Pure Reason”, published in 1781, revolutionized the field of philosophy,particularly in the areas of epistemology, metaphysics, and the nature of reality. The book presents acomprehensive critique of pure […]
End Project Advice and GPU Server – DeepSeek-R1
It’s understandable to feel overwhelmed when faced with high-pressure demands for innovation, especially inpursuit of cutting-edge solutions. Here’s a structured approach to help navigate this situation: Assess LLM Effectiveness: Strategic Use of LLMs: Managing Expectations: Starting Small: Leverage AI as a Tool: By integrating these strategies, you can harness the power of LLMs effectively while […]
_AugmentedIntelligence Folding2
Though of a few folding experiments with books and Wikias folding. Deductive and Inductive Syllogisms for the Wikias and classification and analysis of thousands of books and other literature works. Below are links with instructions on how to use them.