9 Ideas I Learned from The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters
/Tom Nichol’s The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters provides valuable insight on how ordinary humans can dismiss experts by believing they know more than people who have spent decades studying a topic. The ease of information access has caused many people to believe they know more than they really do. Confidence is now substituted for actual knowledge. Egos have grown so large that people are conditioned to attack those they disagree with, rather than try to learn from them. Individuals are becoming more convinced they are right even as their ignorance grows. The book covers several reasons why this occurs. While you can’t prevent others from behaving this way, this book is a helpful guide to help yourself identify and correct overconfidence in your knowledge.
The 9 Best Ideas
o We Prioritize Egos and Emotions Over Rationality and Humility
o We Love Information That Confirms Our Beliefs
o Bad Information Crowds Out Knowledge
o It’s Not That Experts Are Never Wrong, Just Wrong Less Often Than You
o The Illusion of Explanatory Depth: Knowing Random Facts Doesn’t Equal Knowledge
o We Struggle with Uncertainty and Unpredictability and Will Do/Believe Almost Anything to Remove These Feelings
o Objectivity
o We’ve Conflated Getting a Degree with Being Educated
o We No Longer Want to Do the Deep Work
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