重新加一下到这个Vision里
Most good things have undersired 'side effects', and thinking is no exception. The best defense is that of the best physicists, who systematically criticize themselves to an extreme degree, using a mindset described by Nobel laureate Richard Feynman as follows: The first principal is that you must not fool yourself and you're the easiest person to fool.
The ethos of not fooling yourself is one of the best you could possibly have. It's powerful because it's so rare.
创建了一个新的记本
希望可以向达尔文学习:养成记录一些和自己有些出入的观点
避免一致性的倾向
namely whenever a published fact, a new obervation or thought came across me, which was opposed to my generall results, to make a memorandum of it wihout fail and at once; for I had found by experience that such facts and thoughts were for more apt to escape from memory than favorable one. Owing to this habit, very few objections werer raised against my views which I had not at least noticed and attempted to answer.
One of the most successful users of an antidote to first conclusion basis was Charles Darwin. He trained himself, early, to intensively consider any evidence tending to disconfirm any hypothesis of his, more so if he thought his hypothesis was a particularly good one. The opposite of what Darwin did is now called confirmation bias, a term of opprobriu,. Darwin's practice came from his acute recognition of man's natural cognitive faults arising from Inconsitency-Avoidance Tendency. He provides a great example of psychological insight used correctly to advance some of the finest mental work ever done.