Shadow of Cerberus

Public => EVE World News => Thema gestartet von: Aura am November 01, 2012, 01:10:41 Vormittag

Titel: [Jester's Trek] Cognitive dissonance
Beitrag von: Aura am November 01, 2012, 01:10:41 Vormittag
Cognitive dissonance

EVE players are masters of cognitive dissonance.

Defined, the term describes a mental state in which you convince yourself that a situation is an overall net positive despite having many more negative aspects than positive ones.  The simplest example is "I didn't want that ship/moon/system/region anyway."  Of course, if you really believed that you would have sold the ship or given away the moon, system, or region months ago.  You didn't, but you convince yourself that the loss is really for the best.

With that in mind, I invite you to read through this somewhat unintentionally amusing blog post "The War Against Super Capitals" by Wilhelm Arcturus at The Ancient Gaming Noob.  Well, it's amusing in context.  I count no fewer than ten examples of major cognitive dissonance (they're quotes from the piece):
That last one is the one that really sells it for me.  ;-)  "This fight sucked in ten different ways, but it was fun!"  That's cognitive dissonance.

I'm not trying to make light of TAGN's experiences; he's a great blogger who I admire a great deal.  His post does a better job of describing the fight than themittani.com's coverage.  You can see many Goon pilots also saying how much fun this was.(1)  It's funny how good humans are at convincing themselves that negative experiences are actually positive ones.

And EVE players are masters at it.  We've all got this particular skill trained to V...


(1) The few IRC/NCdot pilots that try to comment are almost instantly shouted down by Goons.
Source: Cognitive dissonance (http://jestertrek.blogspot.com/2012/10/cognitive-dissonance.html)