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Reading Notes —— Chapter 2 of Social Psychology: Self (Self-service Deviation) in Society
In fact, most of us will feel good about ourselves.

This is also one of the most challenging and conclusive conclusions in the field of social psychology.

Many experiments have proved that people are willing to accept the honor of success when they know they are successful. They attribute their success to their own talent and hard work, but their failure to external factors such as "bad luck" and "the problem itself cannot be solved"

This phenomenon is particularly obvious in the case of relying on both ability and luck.

This is one of the strongest prejudices.

Let's think it over. Have we ever had it in our work and life?

Of course, this exists not only in the working society, but also when comparing yourself with others. This phenomenon also exists more or less in marriage.

What will this phenomenon become after amplification? pollyanna

This phenomenon warns us to be prepared for danger in times of peace.

In life, we will certainly strengthen and maintain our self-image, and we often show such a strange tendency:

Overestimate or underestimate the extent to which others will think and act like us.

In terms of viewpoint, we overestimate others' recognition of our viewpoint to support our position, which is the so-called false universality effect.

As far as ability is concerned, when we do well or succeed, we are more likely to have false uniqueness effects. We regard our intelligence and morality as extraordinary, so as to improve our self-imagination.

Everything has two sides.

The pride generated by self-help deviation can help us resist depression, which is its positive side.

But it will also bring some bad adaptations to people, such as blaming others for their social difficulties.

When we are in a group, there will also be group service deviation: self-service deviation will exaggerate people's evaluation of their own group

Finally, end with a famous saying: