Motivated skepticism
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Motivated skepticism is the mistake of applying more skepticism to claims that you don't like (or intuitively disbelieve), than to claims that you do like. Because emotional disposition towards a claim isn't generally evidence about its truth, including it in the process of arriving at a belief means holding the belief partly for reasons other than because it's true.
Blog posts
- Knowing About Biases Can Hurt People
- Motivated Stopping and Motivated Continuation
- The Skeptic's Trilemma by Yvain
- Undiscriminating Skepticism
External Links
See also
- Motivated cognition
- Least convenient possible world
- Filtered evidence, Conservation of expected evidence
- Color politics
- Positive bias
- Rationalization, Oops
- Dangerous knowledge