The Cure for Stupidity provides great insight into reality versus perception and how human relationships and communication operate on this basis. I loved this book because it was interactive and provided insight on how to properly communicate in a work environment and in life in general.
The book breaks down: The Observation Trap Principles, The Orientation Trap Principles, The Decision Trap Principles, and The Action Trap Principles. I love how this book introduces the brain as complex with highlighting that we aren’t necessarily wrong, we just have a different perception from the person we may be talking to.
The book dives into The Observation Trap with elements of the illusion of certainty—the fact that we are always certain that we are right. This bleeds into later topics in his book, but it is the fact that we always fight to be right in arguments versus seeing the other person’s perspective because being human means that we value winning arguments, even if it’s at the expense of someones feelings. He emphasizes that if you are looking to win an argument, that you should most likely step away from the argument. He also talks about switchtracking—a strategy or defense mechanism a person will utilize when asked a personal question, targeted to get a negative response.
The next section—The Orientation Trap dives into how humans innately want to be right all of the time and how, as I mentioned before, we make it a point yo win arguments. He also dives into fundamental attribution error which is explaining people’s behaviors based on situations. The author dives into the Napoleon Complex, also known as the “short man syndrome” that talks about how men that are shorter perceive themselves to not be worthy, so they use aggressive behaviors or overcompensation to try to combat this. The author went into how utilizing overcompensation of a stereotype that group puts on you could potentially emphasize that stereotype instead of hide it.
The third section— The Decision Trap Principles dove into OODA: Observe, Orient, Decide and Act. Additionally, the book dove into cognitive destruction and spoke about how technology is a great example of cognitive destruction because the pure distraction it has added to this generation with even having your phone on the table/desk during class, family time etc. you are not fully engaged. The book also goes on to say that multi-tasking is not good for the brain and that a lot of the tasks would be done faster with not multi-tasking. In fact, a lot of the “multi-tasking” we do is serial tasking.
The last section— The Action Trap Principles touched on how our brain loves patterns. It mentions on how our brain may see a car multiple times after it is brought to our attention or how our brain loves faces and to make inanimate objects have faces. Our fusiform gyrus is majorly responsible for facial recognition. This chapter also touches on how we assume there is one cause to one effect as humans and how this is incorrect because there is ultimately more than one.
Overall, this book was really well written and as someone who has read Crucial Conversations—I would say it’s a similar book with new perspectives and extra insight! I absolutely loved Crucial Conversations and I loved this book. It was well written and articulated! I think every young student should read this book!!