Friday, November 28, 2025

Investigation

Ed Emshwiller - Galactic Derelict

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The truth about fake intelligence
Some people look intelligent until they
start talking. Because the truth is, a
lot of what people do to appear smart
actually exposes how insecure they are.
Psychology says we crave the feeling of
intelligence more than actual growth. We
want to seem sharp, sound logical, and
look confident, and even if deep down we
don't know what we're talking about.
These are the habits that fool your
brain into thinking you're smart while
quietly keeping you average.
Habit #1
One, you overexlain everything. You
think you're showing intelligence by
adding detail. But according to research
on overjustification bias, people who
explain too much often do it to hide
uncertainty. Smart people simplify. They
don't drown meaning in words. If you
always feel the need to prove your
point, you're probably not sure of it
yourself.
Habit #2
Two, you chase information, not understanding.
You read books, watch videos, and
even quote psychology. But ask yourself,
can you teach what you just learned? If
not, you're stuck in what psychologists
call the illusion of knowledge, where
your brain confuses exposure for
mastery. Real intelligence isn't about
how much you know, it's how deeply you
can connect ideas.
Habit #3
Three, you argue to win, not to learn.
Ever notice how some people can't stand
being wrong? That's not intelligence.
That's ego anxiety. It's your brain
protecting your self-image, not seeking
truth. Psychologically, it's called
motivated reasoning. You twist facts to
support what you already believe. So,
you may sound confident, but you're
actually trapped inside your own bias.
Habit #4
Four, you confuse skepticism with
wisdom. You think doubting everything
makes you smart, but extreme skepticism
is just defensive ignorance. It's easier
to reject things than to understand
them. Smart people question things to
learn. Fake smart people question things
to look superior.
Habit #5
Five. You use logic to avoid emotion.
Many people brag about being logical.
But neuroscience shows emotion and logic
are not separate systems. They
cooperate. People who suppress emotion
make worse decisions, not better ones.
If you dismiss feelings as weakness,
you're not logical. You're emotionally
blind.
Habit #6
Six,
you correct others to feel superior.
Grammar, pronunciation, fun facts. You
jump at every small mistake to fix
people. But studies show this is linked
to linguistic insecurity. A
psychological need to reassert power
when you feel small. Smart people don't
prove knowledge. They share it when it's
needed.
Habit #7
Seven, you hide behind big words.
You use complex vocabulary to sound
intellectual, but that's actually a red
flag of insecurity. A Princeton study
found people who deliberately use
complicated language are perceived as
less intelligent because clarity is a
sign of depth. Confusion is a sign of
disguise.
Habit #8
Eight, you think knowing about it equals
understanding it. Knowing about
philosophy doesn't make you wise.
Knowing about psychology doesn't make
you emotionally intelligent. And knowing
about success doesn't make you
disciplined. Knowledge is a mirror. It
shows you who you could be. But until
you act, it means nothing.
Real intelligence is quiet
Here’s the truth. Fake intelligence impresses
people who don't think. Real
intelligence changes the way you think.
You don't need to look smart. You need
to stay curious, humble, and brutally
honest with yourself. Because the moment
you stop trying to look intelligent,
that's the moment you actually become
it.

Carter Kaplan said...

Thanks you, anonymous. Excellent points.

Perhaps the "essence" of good scepticism is a willingness to admit 1) "I/we don't know, and let's proceed with that understanding. And 2) Let's agree to disagree when we do, but otherwise work earnestly together in a spirit of good faith.

I'll blog these tomorrow (Dec. 3) with a few remarks.

Thanks again.