• Emmy@lemmy.nz
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    8 months ago

    Honestly show anyone this bone and ask them, “if this were created 1 million years ago, was it likely a male or female which made the incisions”, you might be surprised at the answers

    Consistently this is not the case. The effect you’re describing is the false consensus effect. Which assumes everyone thinks the same as you do.

    • fine_sandy_bottom
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      8 months ago

      Nonsense. The existence of the false consensus effect is not evidence that people assume males were more likely than women to invent calendars in pre-history.

      I could just as well say that the assumption that everyone will assume males are more likely to invent calendars in prehistory is a feature of any number of cognitive biases.

      • Emmy@lemmy.nz
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        8 months ago

        No, but the false consensus effect is what you did. Assume people are the same as your opinion.

        • fine_sandy_bottom
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          8 months ago

          What about the respiring mammal effect, whereby both you and I are simultaneously respiring, allowing us to not die and enabling our respective cognition? It’s not particularly relevant either.

          Most people expressing opinions assume that their opinions are widely held.

          I’m coining a new logical fallacy. I’m calling it the logical fallacy logical fallacy, whereby people think that enumerating logical fallacies and cognitive biases somehow makes their argument more compelling. Really, it just makes you look like a vapid lazy thinker.