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Ethan Mollick
Repeated statements seem more true than new ones (even if they aren't), "the illusory truth effect." This depressing paper shows that knowledge that a statement is false does not protect from the effect: a repeatedly heard falsehood still seems more true, even if you know better.
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REBEL ROUSER 22. stu
Odgovor korisniku/ci @emollick
Always insightful and informative, sir. Thanks
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Soren 23. stu
Odgovor korisniku/ci @emollick @SteveStuWill
Yes, I’ve heard that before. It’s starting to ring true… Still, truth has a way of resurfacing. It does not go away no matter for how long it’s suppressed/ignored. Eventually it might surface in a time when human psychology and biology will allow it to flourish
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Chris Kelley 22. stu
Odgovor korisniku/ci @emollick @craigengler
Yet somehow Trump’s endlessly repeated lies are totally unbelievable to me. They do not seem true. At all. And I don’t think I’m special.
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INTP Pandagrammer 23. stu
Odgovor korisniku/ci @greatwetshart @emollick @craigengler
Unfortunately, that also has to do with the fact that you don’t like Trump. Plenty of Trump followers seem to be utterly convinced that he speaks truth... 😑
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