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This is an excellent, comprehensive examination of the things we believe, and why. It is a very well-written, well-organized book with a unifying theme: we form our beliefs, and then we rationalize them with explanations. We initially formulate our beliefs through two processes: patternicity and agenticity. Patternicity allows us to form all sorts of weird beliefs, including the whole gamut of superstitions. For example, if something bad happens when a black cat crosses your path, and at a later
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This is a truly ambitious work that attempts to bring an understanding to why and how we form our beliefs and rationalize them. The book goes through the ways in which we form beliefs and then find ways to justify those beliefs. Mr. Shermer's theory attempt to persuade us that this is in fact the default human behavior, that rational scientific thought is actually harder for us. And looking at the range of science denialism I see in the world today this seems to make some sense. Several differen
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Michael Shermaer may be my new favorite skeptic author. He is a pleasure to read and I relate more to his own personal narrative than to other great skeptics like Dennett/Dawkins/Hitchens etc. This is a great, broad-reaching book that talks about cognitive biases and how our brains construct belief. Beliefs are emotional and then we try to construct rationale to support our beliefs.
While reading the book, I often found myself asking the question, "Why is a history of science and cognitive bias c ...more
While reading the book, I often found myself asking the question, "Why is a history of science and cognitive bias c ...more

Good book! I especially enjoyed Part II on the "Biology of Belief". It went into great detail on how beliefs are formed in the brain. It could have been very dry, but Shermer managed to make it come alive. Chapter 12 on "Confirmations of Belief" was also very interesting.
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May 08, 2019
Jade Gonzales
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