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6/ In investing?

As the saying goes, "everyone is a genius in a bull market."

When markets are ripping and your portfolio seems to grow by the day, many fall victim to the Dunning-Kruger Effect.

We may wrongly attribute this performance to our innate talent as investors.
7/ In politics?

With politics, intellectual humility is an aberration, not the norm.

Politicians espouse policy ideas with great confidence even if they have a weak handle of the details.

It's not shocking that we see Cobra Effects in the policy realm.
8/ In business?

Everyone has had that one boss - the know-it-all who actually knows very little.

These bosses (who typically get stuck in middle management) hold back organizations from high performance.

They are easy to spot - we all know who they are.

Beware this boss!
9/ But while we can all rail against the politicians, bosses, or public figures who seem to epitomize the Dunning-Kruger Effect, it is important to recognize that, as humans, we are all prone to this cognitive bias!

So how do we avoid it?

Here are a few strategies.

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10/ Identify your Circle of Competence.

The Circle of Competence is the set of topic areas that align with a person's expertise.

Be ruthless in identifying and protecting the boundaries of your Circle of Competence.

Hint: it's usually smaller than you think.
11/ Get comfortable with, "I don't know."

Most people have an inherent discomfort with saying, "I don't know."

Change that. Embrace what you don't know.

The world would be a much better, more efficient place if we stripped out the fluff and cut to the "I don't know" chase.
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12/ Be a first principles thinker.

Think you know something? Challenge yourself, your reasoning, and your assumptions as a matter of practice.

It's uncomfortable, but it is also essential to creating non-linear outcomes.
13/ As Charlie Munger said, "It is remarkable how much long-term advantage people like us have gotten by trying to be consistently not stupid, instead of trying to be very intelligent."

Know your competencies, focus on them.

Know your incompetencies, avoid (or outsource) them.
14/ "It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so."

So the next time you catch yourself marveling at your skill at a task, remember the Dunning-Kruger Effect and the strategies for avoiding it.
15/ That was Dunning-Kruger Effect 101. I hope you found it useful.

For more on this topic, check out the resources below:

https://t.co/5TpIxyWjCD

https://t.co/mYfcPw2rcH

https://t.co/9lmroooQHn

https://t.co/2rlAXpPGt6

https://t.co/sAqJLE1gJi

https://t.co/5vAlRTbi5u

Credits: SahilBloom × VisualizeValue via Twitter
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It's much easier to lose fat when you have a lot of muscle on your frame.

Skinny fat people need to get more weight on the bar and put on more muscle first, instead of doing a cut right away.

-Life Math Money
For those who can't visualize it:

Imagine following two cars:

Toyota Prius with 50 horse power

Mercedes CLS 53 AMG with 500 horse power

Your muscles = horse power

The Mercedes will burn much more even driving slow = while you are resting or sleeping
Tearing someone down is a short term play. Building others up is a long term play.

Surround yourself with people who play the long game.

-Mkobach via Twitter
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A perk of fasting regularly for years:

Your mind stops constantly thinking about food, and you can focus more deeply and clearly as a result.

- Orange Book via Twitter
You don't learn, then start. You start, then learn.

Sahil Lavingia via Twitter
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Popular opinion: Kids should set goals

Unpopular opinion: Kids should set Anti-Goals

What if kids could get to where they want by avoiding what they don’t want?

A thread 👇
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I recently learned a new trick from Charlie Munger who stated:

“Tell me where I’m going to die, so I’ll never go there.”

He’s talking about inversion: the idea that reversing a problem can help to solve it.
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Here’s how Munger put it:

“Problems frequently get easier if you turn them around in reverse. In other words, if you want to help India, the question you should ask is *not* ‘how can I help India,’ it’s ‘what is doing the worst damage in India and how do I avoid it?”
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