Few know how to control themselves consistently, no, which is why success is an anomaly rather than the norm. — Yohan
I suspect everyone, or most, "suffer" from Dunning Kruger. — Yohan
But what if the supposed objective ‘fact’ of ability on which the effect is based is nothing but an abstracted average derived from the real individual variability in self-assessment? — Joshs
Just because it is a term abused by some doesn't mean the concept is bullshit. — DingoJones
So I find your criticism weak, and it has the wiff of prejudice, like its a cherished opportunity to push back with some sort of disdain for psych terms or something. — DingoJones
But what if the supposed objective ‘fact’ of ability on which the effect is based is nothing but an abstracted average derived from the real individual variability in self-assessment?
— Joshs
This is baloney. I was an engineer for 30 years. Before that, I was a cabinetmaker for 10. I knew who was good at what they did and who was not. It's not hard to tell. — T Clark
It is bullshit because 1) it is often, usually, used to add a patina of reason to a poorly-thought-through criticism. 2) Many people who use the term don't even know what it means. 3) The prime sign of jargon - the term's meaning can be easily and clearly, more clearly, expressed in everyday language. — T Clark
I think, perhaps, you overestimate your own ability to understand the motives for my opinion, which, by the way, are not relevant to my argument and shouldn't be part of your response. So, maybe, you also overestimate your ability to reason effectively. — T Clark
I suspect everyone, or most, "suffer" from Dunning Kruger. — Yohan
All of that was noted and rebutted in my initial comment. — DingoJones
I never offered an estimation of your motives for your opinion — DingoJones
its a cherished opportunity to push back with some sort of disdain for psych terms — DingoJones
Yes, but I thought the point of Dunning Kruger was eaxh person’s assessment of their own capabilities, not your assenssmanr of their capabilities. — Joshs
how has your assessment of others skills been shaped by your own skill development? Before you learnt engineering or cabinetry , how might your judgement of others talents in those arenas differed? Would you disagree with the idea that how much you know influences your opinion on others’ abilities? — Joshs
This discussion reminds me of Godwin's Law. It used to be a way to throw shade. — James Riley
You are mistaken, again. Neither agitated nor angry, just not into wasting my time. You’ve decided not to engage and so mock instead, thats fine, it was amusing but inevitably boring. — DingoJones
I think DK itself is subject to the DK effect and is cheerfully misapplied to many things. — Tom Storm
But because of the dual constitution of things, in labor as in life there can be no cheating. The thief steals from himself. The swindler swindles himself. — T Clark
We had a nice example of it a while back when a poster posted a thread about ad hominems, asking questions about it. Some posters suggested some literature on the topic, for the OP's questions are readily addressed in it. But the OP refused to read that literature, and claimed that suggesting that they read that was an ad hominem. — baker
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