Cognitive biases

Cognitive biases are systematic "errors" of perception and thinking that arise from limitations of attention, memory, and the brain's tendency to simplify reality. They help make quick decisions but can lead to incorrect conclusions, especially in situations of uncertainty. In the context of symbolic practices (numerology, astrology, divination), biases explain why general statements seem accurate and coincidences appear meaningful.

Type article
Language en
Updated 2026-03-02
Contents on the right

In brief

A short summary — what the topic usually means and how it is commonly perceived.

What it is
systematic perceptual and cognitive errors
Why they arise
heuristics, limits of attention and memory, and the drive for meaning
Important for
understanding 'hits' and the significance of coincidences
How to reduce
alternatives, facts, fundamental frequencies, experiments

What are cognitive biases

Cognitive biases are stable patterns in how people perceive information, interpret events, and make decisions. They arise not because a person is "bad", but because the brain optimizes its work: it conserves attention, generalizes, and looks for quick answers.

In everyday life this is often useful. But in tasks where accuracy, probability, and hypothesis testing matter, biases can lead to erroneous conclusions.

Why they arise

  • Limitations of attention — we cannot process everything at once.
  • Limitations of memory — we don't remember "everything", but what is vivid and convenient.
  • Speed of decisions — the brain prefers fast heuristics.
  • Need for meaning — uncertainty is unsettling, we seek an explanation.

Common biases

Below is a set of biases that are especially important for understanding "hits" in horoscopes, numerology, divination readings, and any "universal descriptions".

Confirmation bias

We are more likely to notice and remember information that confirms an existing view, and ignore what contradicts it.

  • Marker: "See, I knew it".
  • Antidote: look for counterexamples and alternative explanations.

Availability heuristic

We estimate the probability of events by how easily examples come to mind. Vivid cases seem frequent, even if they are rare.

  • Marker: "I keep seeing this" (because I remembered it).
  • Antidote: look at statistics and base rates.

Barnum effect

General descriptions are perceived as "very accurate" and personal. Especially if they sound positive and leave room for interpretation.

  • Marker: "this is about me".
  • Antidote: check whether this would apply to most people.

Subjective validation

We accept a claim as true if it "resonates" and allows us to construct specifics from personal experience.

  • Marker: "I feel that this is true".
  • Antidote: ask for specific facts and examples.

Apophenia and pattern-seeking

A tendency to see meaning and connections in random data: repeating numbers, "signs", coincidences, random phrases.

  • Marker: "everything lines up, this can't be a coincidence".
  • Antidote: assess how many opportunities for coincidences there were.

Hindsight bias

After an event it seems predictable: "it was obvious". Because of this we overestimate the accuracy of forecasts and underestimate uncertainty.

  • Marker: "well of course, it couldn't have been otherwise".
  • Antidote: record predictions in advance and compare them with the outcome.

Illusion of control

It seems that random processes can be controlled by "intention", ritual, or correct interpretation.

  • Marker: "if I do X, then Y will definitely happen" (without a causal link).
  • Antidote: separate ritual as support from actual influence.

How to use this knowledge

The purpose of the list of biases is not to "expose" a person, but to improve decision quality. It is especially useful to apply checks where the stakes are high (money, health, relationships, career).

  1. State the hypothesis: what exactly am I asserting?
  2. Look for alternatives: what other causes are possible?
  3. Ask for examples: 2–3 concrete cases from the last month.
  4. Look at base rates: how rare is this event in general?
  5. Do experiments: small testable steps instead of belief.
Mini-template:
         - claim: "this is a sign that I should quit my job"
         - alternatives: fatigue, conflict, burnout, a real mismatch of values
         - check: what if I collect facts for 2 weeks and talk to my manager?
         - step: make a list of problems and decision criteria

In symbolic practices

Symbolic systems can be useful as a language of reflection, if kept within a correct framework: interpretations as hypotheses, questions instead of verdicts, verification through experience and facts.

  • Useful — structure thoughts and emotions, see options.
  • Dangerous — replacing analysis of reality with "precise forecasts" and prohibitions.

Criticism and scientific perspective

The term "cognitive biases" is used very broadly in popular psychology, so it's important not to turn it into a "weapon" against others. Biases are not a verdict, but a description of typical limitations of thinking.

In practice it's more useful not to list dozens of names, but to develop skills: fact-checking, working with probability, the ability to tolerate uncertainty and change one's mind when presented with new data.

See also

Notes

  1. The page text is reference-editorial; terms are given in a popular form.
  2. Biases often occur together and depend on context, stress, and motivation.
  3. The goal of the material is to improve decision quality, not to "win an argument".

Literature

  • Popular books on critical thinking and probabilistic thinking.
  • Materials on the Barnum effect, subjective validation, and apophenia.
  • Educational sources on the psychology of decision making and heuristics.