Psychologyspeaking topic
The gambler's fallacy: after a string of heads, why is 'tails is due now' wrong? Why do we attribute memory and fairness to independent events?
— gambler's fallacy
practice with this topic
Set the timer (5-30 min), take 20 seconds of prep if you like, start talking. Jot your thoughts onto the sticky-note board.
similar topics
- Displacement: getting furious at your boss and yelling at the dog when you get home. Why do we always unload anger on the safest target instead of its real source?
- Color names emerge in the same order in every language: first black and white, then red, then green and yellow, with blue arriving last. Homer called the sea 'wine-dark' because ancient Greek had no word for blue. Did humanity not see blue, or see it and fail to notice it for lack of a name?
- The scarcity principle: why do we suddenly want something more when it's running out or labeled 'last chance'? How does the fear of missing out inflate desire?
- Basic level categories: why do we call the thing 'a dog' first, not 'an animal' or 'a golden retriever'? Does the mind have a favorite level of abstraction it naturally reaches for?
- Expertise and chunking: chess masters can glance at a board for one second and reproduce it, but not if the pieces are placed at random. Is expertise really just seeing in bigger chunks?