Naïve realism (psychology)
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In social psychology, naïve realism is the human tendency to believe that we see the world around us objectively, and that people who disagree with us must be uninformed, irrational, or biased.
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See also
- List of cognitive biases
- Attribution theory
- Naïve cynicism
- Depressive realism
- Egocentric bias
- False-consensus effect
- Bias blind spot
- Curse of knowledge
- Hindsight bias
- Hostile media effect
- Attitude polarization
- Reactive devaluation
- Fundamental attribution error
- Empathy gap
- Confirmation bias
- Theory of mind
- False-belief task
- Spotlight effect
- Actor-observer bias
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