It's fascinating to watch how people process the same reality so differently. Everyone ends up believing what aligns with their existing worldview—facts get filtered through personal bias before they even register. What's particularly interesting is how people flat-out reject evidence when it contradicts their narrative. Take a straightforward scenario: someone in immediate danger, a vehicle barreling toward them. Yet even with something this objective, you'll get people arguing over whether the threat was real or exaggerated. That disconnect between what happened and what people choose to accept says a lot about human psychology.
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MoonRocketTeam
· 8h ago
Huh, isn't this the scene where the information cocoon rocket was destroyed? All the astronauts are living in their own parallel universes.
Humans' belief system is more resilient than any booster. The facts have long been filtered by dopamine; we can't land on the moon or get into orbit.
Even as cars are about to crash, people are still arguing over how threatening it is. This psychological logic really needs a data reload.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 8h ago
ngl That's why the crypto world is so magical. Everyone is living in their own parallel universe.
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Web3ExplorerLin
· 01-09 15:49
hypothesis: this is basically the oracle problem but for human consciousness, innit? like we're all running different consensus mechanisms in our heads and refusing to sync across the chain. the real mindbender is when objective reality itself becomes subjective just because we won't agree on what the data *means*.
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MEVHunterLucky
· 01-08 13:02
Basically, it's just an information cocoon, each fighting their own battles. Even something as straightforward as a car crashing into you can cause a fuss for half a day. I'm truly speechless. People just love to live in their own stories.
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StakeOrRegret
· 01-08 04:50
In simple terms, people live in their own information cocoons, and even the most straightforward facts can be mentally twisted into the opposite. Crying with laughter
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DAOdreamer
· 01-08 04:49
At the end of the day, it's still the same old information cocoon, each doing their own thing.
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It's ridiculous. Even when a car crashes into you, people still argue. Humanity's self-deception ability is incredible.
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That's why information warfare in Web3 is so intense—everyone lives in their own story.
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The word "narrative" is perfectly used; we are all prisoners of our stories.
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So, whether Bitcoin goes up or down, people can argue different truths—that's normal.
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People will always believe what they want to believe, no matter how much evidence there is.
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CountdownToBroke
· 01-08 04:49
Honestly, this is a typical echo chamber, everyone just doing their own thing and feeling good about it.
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Incredible, even when a car is about to crash, people still argue about whether it's real or not. The mental resilience is amazing.
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So, no matter how much evidence you present, they just stick to their set of beliefs. Sigh.
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This paragraph is ridiculous. Is this what humans are like? They have to believe what they want to believe.
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I just want to ask, how do those self-deceivers manage to do it? What about logic?
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Reality can be redefined; the crypto world has been playing like this for a long time. Nothing surprising anymore.
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Ha, they can't even uphold fundamental truths, so what hope is there for rational discussion?
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TokenCreatorOP
· 01-08 04:40
ngl this is the true reflection of the Web3 community... When the coin price drops, everyone's opinions change
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Basically, it's a bias of faith. Our crypto circle is even more serious—some people refuse to admit they were wrong after losing money
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Isn't this just an echo chamber? Everyone lives in their own narrative
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Haha, when objective facts meet ego, it's all pointless... Just like how some project teams' explanations are believed by some
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The gap between reality and perception is always so ironic, especially when money is involved
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It's quite interesting. Humans are creatures that naturally filter information, and that can't be changed
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So, don't argue about what's right or wrong with others—just believe what you believe... Peaceful coexistence is the most comfortable
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From a psychological perspective, it definitely makes sense, but actually implementing it is difficult. I've experienced it myself
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This paragraph hits the nail on the head—people even argue over obvious facts... the weakness of human nature
It's fascinating to watch how people process the same reality so differently. Everyone ends up believing what aligns with their existing worldview—facts get filtered through personal bias before they even register. What's particularly interesting is how people flat-out reject evidence when it contradicts their narrative. Take a straightforward scenario: someone in immediate danger, a vehicle barreling toward them. Yet even with something this objective, you'll get people arguing over whether the threat was real or exaggerated. That disconnect between what happened and what people choose to accept says a lot about human psychology.