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http://youarenotsosmart.com/2011/08/21/the-illusion-of-asymmetric-insight/

The Illusion of Asymmetric Insight

The Misconception:  You celebrate diversity and respect others’ points of view.

The Truth: You are driven to create and form groups and then believe others are 
wrong just because they are others.


Source: "Lord of the Flies," 1963, Two Arts Ltd.

In 1954, in eastern Oklahoma, two tribes of children nearly killed each other.

The neighboring tribes were unaware of each other’s existence. Separately, they 
lived among nature, played games, constructed shelters, prepared food – they 
knew peace. Each culture developed its own norms and rules of conduct. Each 
culture arrived at novel solutions to survival-critical problems. Each culture 
named the creeks and rocks and dangerous places, and those names were known to 
all. They helped each other and watched out for the well-being of the tribal 
members.

Scientists stood by, watchful, scribbling notes and whispering. Much nodding 
and squinting took place as the tribes granted to anthropology and psychology a 
wealth of data about how people build and maintain groups, how hierarchies are 
established and preserved. They wondered, the scientists, what would happen if 
these two groups were to meet.

These two tribes consisted of 22 boys, ages 11 and 12, whom psychologist 
Muzafer Sherif brought together at Oklahoma’s Robber’s Cave State Park. He and 
his team placed the two groups on separate buses and drove them to a Boy Scout 
Camp inside the park – the sort with cabins and caves and thick wilderness. At 
the park, the scientists put the boys into separate sides of the camp about a 
half-mile apart and kept secret the existence and location of the other group. 
The boys didn’t know each other beforehand, and Sherif believed putting them 
into a new environment away from their familiar cultures would encourage them 
to create a new culture from scratch.

He was right, but as those cultures formed and met something sinister presented 
itself. One of the behaviors which pushed and shoved its way to the top of the 
boys’ minds is also something you are fending off at this very moment, 
something which is making your life harder than it ought to be. We’ll get to 
all that it in a minute. First, let’s get back to one of the most telling and 
frightening experiments in the history of psychology.


Sherif and his colleagues pretended to be staff members at the camp so they 
could record, without interfering, the natural human drive to form tribes. 
Right away, social hierarchies began to emerge in which the boys established 
leaders and followers and special roles for everyone in between. Norms 
spontaneously generated. For instance, when one boy hurt his foot but didn’t 
tell anyone until bedtime, it became expected among the group that Rattlers 
didn’t complain. From then on members waited until the day’s work was finished 
to reveal injuries. When a boy cried, the others ignored him until he got over 
it. Regulations and rituals sprouted just as quickly. For instance, the 
high-status members, the natural leaders, in both groups came up with 
guidelines for saying grace during meals and correct rotations for the ritual. 
Within a few days their initially arbitrary suggestions became the way things 
were done, and no one had to be prompted or reprimanded. They made up games and 
settled on rules of play. They embarked on projects to clean up certain areas 
and established chains of command. Slackers were punished. Over achievers were 
praised. Flags were created. Signs erected.

Soon, the two groups began to suspect they weren’t alone. They would find 
evidence of others. They found cups and other signs of civilization in places 
they didn’t remember visiting. This strengthened their resolve and encouraged 
the two groups to hold tighter to their new norms, values, rituals and all the 
other elements of the shared culture. At the end of the first week, the 
Rattlers discovered the others on the camp’s baseball diamond. >From this point 
forward both groups spent most of their time thinking about how to deal with 
their new-found adversaries. The group with no name asked about the outsiders. 
When told the other group called themselves the Rattlers, they elected a 
baseball captain and asked the camp staff if they could face off in a game with 
the enemy. They named their baseball team the Eagles after an animal they 
thought ate snakes.


>From the study, the boys face each other for the first time

Sherif and his colleagues had already planned on pitting the groups against 
each other in competitive sports. They weren’t just researching how groups 
formed but also how they acted when in competition for resources. The fact the 
boys were already becoming incensed over the baseball field seemed to fall 
right in line with their research. So, the scientists proceeded with stage two. 
The two tribes were overjoyed to learn they would not only play baseball, but 
compete in tug-of-war, touch football, treasure hunts and other 
summer-camp-themed rivalry. The scientists revealed a finite number of prizes. 
Winners would receive one of a handful of medals or knives. When the boys won 
the knives, some would kiss them before rushing to hide the weapons from the 
other group.

Sherif noted the two groups spent a lot of time talking about how dumb and 
uncouth the other side was. They called them names, lots of names, and they 
seemed to be preoccupied every night with defining the essence of their 
enemies. Sherif was fascinated by this display. The two groups needed the other 
side to be inferior once the competition for limited resources became a factor, 
so they began defining them as such. It strengthened their identity to assume 
the identity of the enemy was a far cry from their own. Everything they learned 
about the other side became an example of how not to be, and if they did happen 
to see similarities they tended to be ignored.

The researchers collected data and discussed findings while planning the next 
series of activities, but the boys made other plans. The experiment was about 
to spiral out of control, and it started with the Eagles.

Some of the Eagles boys discovered the Rattlers’ flag standing unguarded on the 
baseball field. They discussed what to do and decided it should be ripped from 
the ground. Once they had it, a possession of the enemy, a symbol of their 
tribe, they decided to burn it. They then put its scorched remains back in 
place and sang Taps. Later, the Rattlers saw the atrocity and organized a raid 
in which they stole the Eagles’ flag and burned it as payback. When the Eagles 
discovered the revenge burning, the leader issued a challenge – a face off. The 
two leaders then met with their followers watching and prepared to fight, but 
the scientists intervened. That night, the Rattlers dressed in war paint and 
raided the Eagles’ cabins, turning over beds and tearing apart mosquito 
netting. The staff again intervened when the two groups started circling and 
gathering rocks. The next day, the Rattlers painted one of the Eagle boy’s 
stolen blue jeans with insults and paraded it in front of the enemy’s camp like 
a flag. The Eagles waited until the Rattlers were eating and conducted a 
retaliatory raid and then ran back to their cabin to set up defenses. They 
filled socks with rocks and waited. The camp staff, once again, intervened and 
convinced the Rattlers not to counterattack. The raids continued, and the 
interventions too, and eventually the Rattlers stole the Eagles knives and 
medals. The Eagles, determined to retrieve them, formed an organized war party 
with assigned roles and planned tactical maneuvers. The two groups finally 
fought in open combat. The scientists broke up the fights. Fearing the two 
tribes might murder someone, they moved the groups’ camps away from each other.

You probably suspected this was where the story was headed. You know it is 
possible in the right conditions that people, even children, might revert to 
savages. You know about the instant-coffee-version of cultures too. You 
remember high school. You’ve worked in a cubicle farm. You’ve watched Stephen 
King movies. People in new situations instinctively form groups. Those groups 
develop their own language quirks, in-jokes, norms, values and so on. You’ve 
probably suspected zombies, or bombs, or economic collapse would lead to a 
battle over who runs Bartertown. In this study, all they had to do was 
introduce competition for resources and summer camp became Lord of the Flies.

What you may not have noticed though is how much of this behavior is gurgling 
right below the surface of your consciousness day-to-day. You aren’t sharpening 
spears, but at some level you are contemplating your place in society, 
contemplating your allegiances and your opponents. You see yourself as part of 
some groups and not others, and like those boys you spend a lot of time 
defining outsiders. The way you see others is deeply affected by something 
psychologists call the illusion of asymmetric insight, but to understand it 
let’s first consider how groups, like people, have identities – and like 
people, those identities aren’t exactly real.


Source: "The Breakfast Club," 1985, Universal

Hopefully by now you’ve had one of those late-night conversations fueled by 
exhaustion, elation, fear or drugs in which you and your friends finally admit 
you are all bullshitting each other. If you haven’t, go watch The Breakfast 
Club and come back. The idea is this: You put on a mask and uniform before 
leaving for work. You put on another set for school. You have costume for 
friends of different persuasions and one just for family. Who you are alone is 
not who you are with a lover or a friend. You quick-change like Superman in a 
phone booth when you bump into old friends from high school at the grocery 
store, or the ex in line for the movie. When you part, you quick-change back 
and tell the person you are with why you appeared so strange for a moment. They 
understand, after all, they are also in disguise. It’s not a new or novel 
concept, the idea of multiple identities for multiple occasions, but it’s also 
not something you talk about often. The idea is old enough that the word person 
derives from persona – a Latin word for the masks Greek actors sometimes wore 
so people in the back rows of a performance could see who was on stage. This 
concept – actors and performance, persona and masks – has been intertwined and 
adopted throughout history. Shakespeare said, “all the world’s a stage, and all 
the men and women merely players.” William James said a person “has as many 
social selves as there are individuals who recognize him.” Carl Jung was 
particularly fond of the concept of the persona saying it was “that which in 
reality one is not, but which oneself as well as others think one is.” It’s an 
old idea, but you and everyone else seems to stumble onto it anew in 
adolescence, forget about it for a while, and suddenly remember again from time 
to time when you feel like an impostor or a fraud. It’s ok, that’s a natural 
feeling, and if you don’t step back occasionally and feel funky about how you 
are wearing a socially constructed mask and uniform you are probably a 
psychopath.

Social media confounds the issue. You are a public relations masterpiece. Not 
only are you free to create alternate selves for forums, websites and digital 
watering holes, but from one social media service to the next you control the 
output of your persona. The clever tweets, the photos of your delectable 
triumphs with the oven and mixing bowl, the funny meme you send out into the 
firmament that you check back on for comments, the new thing you own, the new 
place you visited – they tell a story of who you want to be, who you ought to 
be. They satisfy something. Is anyone clicking on all these links? Is anyone 
smirking at this video? Are my responses being scoured for grammatical 
infractions? You ask these questions and others, even if they don’t rise to the 
surface.


Source: www.ravenwoodmasks.com

The recent fuss over the over-sharing, over the loss of privacy is just noisy 
ignorance. You know, as a citizen of the Internet, you obfuscate the truth of 
your character. You hide your fears and transgressions and vulnerable yearnings 
for meaning, for purpose, for connection. In a world where you can control 
everything presented to an audience both domestic or imaginary, what is laid 
bare depends on who you believe is on the other side of the screen. You fret 
over your father or your aunt asking to be your Facebook friend. What will they 
think of that version of you? In flesh or photons, it seems built-in, this 
desire to conceal some aspects of yourself in one group while exposing them in 
others. You can be vulnerable in many different ways but not all at once it 
seems.

So, you don social masks just like every human going back to the first 
campfires. You seem rather confident in them, in their ability to communicate 
and conceal that which you want on display and that which you wish was not. 
Groups too don these masks. Political parties establish platforms, companies 
give employees handbooks, countries write out constitutions, tree houses post 
club rules. Every human gathering and institution from the Gay Pride Parade to 
the KKK works to remain connected by developing a set a norms and values which 
signals to members when they are dealing with members of the in-group and help 
identify others as part of the out-group. The peculiar thing though is that 
once you feel this, once you feel included in a human institution or ideology, 
you can’t help but see outsiders through a warped lens called the illusion of 
asymmetric insight.

How well do you know your friends? Pick one out of the bunch, someone you 
interact with often. Do you see the little ways they lie to themselves and 
others? Do you secretly know what is holding them back, but also recognize the 
beautiful talents they don’t appreciate? Do you know what they want, what they 
are likely to do in most situations, what they will argue about and what they 
let slide? Do you notice when they are posturing and when they are vulnerable? 
Do you know the perfect gift? Do you wish they had never went out with 
so-and-so? Do you sometimes say with confidence, “You should have been there. 
You would have loved it,” about things you enjoyed for them, by proxy? Research 
shows you probably feel all these things and more. You see your friends, your 
family, your coworkers and peers as semipermeable beings. You label them with 
ease. You see them as the artist, the grouch, the slacker and the overachiever. 
“They did what? Oh, that’s no surprise.” You know who will watch the meteor 
shower with you and who will pass. You know who to ask about spark plugs and 
who to ask about planting a vegetable garden. You can, you believe, put 
yourself in their shoes and predict their behavior in just about any situation. 
You believe every person not you is an open book. Of course, the research shows 
they believe the same thing about you.

In 2001, Emily Pronin and Lee Ross at Stanford along with Justin Kruger at the 
University of Illinois and Kenneth Savitsky at Williams College conducted a 
series of experiments exploring why you see people this way.

In the first experiment they had people fill out a questionnaire asking them to 
think of a best friend and rate how well they believed they knew him or her. 
They showed the subjects a series of photos showing an iceberg submerged in 
varying levels of water and asked them to circle the one which corresponded to 
how much of the “essential nature” they felt they could see of their friends. 
How much, they asked, of your friend’s true self is visible and much is hidden 
below the surface? They then had the subjects take a second questionnaire which 
turned the questions around asking them to put themselves in the minds of their 
friends. How much of their own iceberg did they think their friends could see? 
Most people rated their insight into their best friend as keen. They saw more 
of the iceberg floating above the water line. In the other direction they felt 
the insight their friend’s possessed of them was lacking, most of their own 
self was submerged.

This and many other studies show you believe you see more of other people’s 
icebergs than they see of yours; meanwhile, they think the same thing about you.

The same researchers asked people to describe a time when they feel most like 
themselves. Most subjects, 78 percent, described something internal and 
unobservable like the feeling of seeing their child excel or the rush of 
applause after playing for an audience. When asked to describe when they 
believed friends or relatives were most illustrative of their personalities, 
they described internal feelings only 28 percent of the time. Instead, they 
tended to describe actions. Tom is most like Tom when he is telling a dirty 
joke. Jill is most like Jill when she is rock climbing. You can’t see internal 
states of others, so you generally don’t use those states to describe their 
personalities.

When they had subjects complete words with some letters missing (like g–l which 
could be goal, girl, gall, gill, etc.) and then ask how much the subjects 
believed those word completion tasks revealed about their true selves, most 
people said they revealed nothing at all. When the same people looked at other 
people’s word completions they said things like, “I get the feeling that 
whoever did this is pretty vain, but basically a nice guy.” They looked at the 
words and said the people who filled them in were nature lovers, or on their 
periods, or were positive thinkers or needed more sleep. When the words were 
their own, they meant nothing. When they were others’, they pulled back a 
curtain.

When Pronin, Ross, Kruger and Savitsky moved from individuals to groups, they 
found an even more troubling version of the illusion of asymmetric insight. 
They had subjects identify themselves as either liberals or conservatives and 
in a separate run of the experiment as either pro-abortion and anti-abortion. 
The groups filled out questionnaires about their own beliefs and how they 
interpreted the beliefs of their opposition. They then rated how much insight 
their opponents possessed. The results showed liberals believed they knew more 
about conservatives than conservatives knew about liberals. The conservatives 
believed they knew more about liberals than liberals knew about conservatives. 
Both groups thought they knew more about their opponents than their opponents 
knew about themselves. The same was true of the pro-abortion rights and 
anti-abortion groups.

The illusion of asymmetric insight makes it seem as though you know everyone 
else far better than they know you, and not only that, but you know them better 
than they know themselves. You believe the same thing about groups of which you 
are a member. As a whole, your group understands outsiders better than 
outsiders understand your group, and you understand the group better than its 
members know the group to which they belong.

The researchers explained this is how one eventually arrives at the illusion of 
naive realism, or believing your thoughts and perceptions are true, accurate 
and correct, therefore if someone sees things differently than you or disagrees 
with you in some way it is the result of a bias or an influence or a 
shortcoming. You feel like the other person must have been tainted in some way, 
otherwise they would see the world the way you do – the right way. The illusion 
of asymmetrical insight clouds your ability to see the people you disagree with 
as nuanced and complex. You tend to see your self and the groups you belong to 
in shades of gray, but others and their groups as solid and defined primary 
colors lacking nuance or complexity.

“Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself; (I am large, I 
contain multitudes.)”
-Walt Whitman from Song of Myself, Leaves of Grass

The two tribes of children in Oklahoma formed because groups are how human 
beings escaped the Serengeti and built pyramids and invented Laffy Taffy. All 
primates depend on groups to survive and thrive, and human groups thrive most 
of all. It is in your nature to form them. Sherif’s experiment with the boys at 
Robber’s Cave showed how quickly and easily you do so, how your innate drive to 
develop and observe norms and rituals will express itself even in a cultural 
vacuum, but there is a dark side to this behavior. As psychologist Jonathan 
Haidt says, our minds “unite us into teams, divide us against other teams, and 
blind us to the truth.” It’s that last part that keeps getting you into 
trouble. Just as you don a self, a persona, and believe it to be thicker and 
harder to see through than those of your friends, family and peers, you too 
believe the groups to which you belong are more complex, more diverse and 
granular than are groups of which you could never imagine yourself a member. 
When you feel the warm comfort of belonging to a team, a tribe, a group – to a 
party, an ideology, a religion or a nation – you instinctively turn others into 
members of outgroups, into outsiders. Just as soldiers come up with derogatory 
names for enemies, every culture and sub-culture has a collection of terms for 
outsiders so as to better see them as a single-minded collective. You are prone 
to forming and joining groups and then believing your groups are more diverse 
than outside groups.

In a political debate you feel like the other side just doesn’t get your point 
of view, and if they could only see things with your clarity, they would 
understand and fall naturally in line with what you believe. They must not 
understand, because if they did they wouldn’t think the things they think. By 
contrast, you believe you totally get their point of view and you reject it. 
You see it in all its detail and understand it for what it is – stupid. You 
don’t need to hear them elaborate. So, each side believes they understand the 
other side better than the other side understands both their opponents and 
themselves.

The research suggests you and rest of humanity will continue to churn into 
groups, banding and disbanding, and the beautiful collective species-wide 
macromonoculture imagined by the most Utopian of dreams might just be 
impossible unless alien warships lay siege to our cities. In Sherif’s study, he 
was able to somewhat reintegrate the boys of the Robber’s Cave experiment by 
telling them the water supply had been sabotaged by vandals. The two groups 
were able to come together and repair it as one. Later he staged a problem with 
one of the camp trucks and was able to get the boys to work together to pull it 
with a rope until it started. They never fully joined into one group, but the 
hostilities eased enough for both groups to ride the same bus together back 
home. It seems peace is possible when we face shared problems, but for now we 
need to be in our tribes. It just feels right.

So, you pick a team, and like the boys at Robber’s Cave, you spend a lot of 
time a lot of time talking about how dumb and uncouth the other side is. You 
too can become preoccupied with defining the essence of your enemies. You too 
need the other side to be inferior, so you define them as such. You start to 
believe your persona is actually your identity, and the identity of your enemy 
is actually their persona. You see yourself in a game of self-deluded poker and 
assume you are impossible to read while everyone else has obvious tells.

The truth is, you are succumbing to the illusion of asymmetric insight, and as 
part of a flatter, more-connected, always-on world, you will be tasked with 
seeing through this illusion more and more often as you are presented with more 
opportunities than ever to confront and define those who you feel are not in 
your tribe. Your ancestors rarely made any contact with people of opposing 
views with anything other than the end of a weapon, so your natural instinct is 
to assume anyone not in your group is wrong just because they are not in your 
group. Remember, you are not so smart, and what seems like an insight is often 
an illusion.

You Are Not So Smart – The Book 

If you buy one book this year…well, I suppose you should get something you’ve 
had your eye on for a while. But, if you buy two or more books this year, might 
I recommend one of them be a celebration of self delusion? Give the gift of 
humility (to yourself or someone else you love).

Preorder now: Amazon - Barnes and Noble – iTunes - Book A Million

Links:

The Robber’s Cave Experiment

Robber’s Cave State Park

The History of Greek Masks

Jung on the persona

Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass

The Illusion of Asymmetric Insight Study


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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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