Confirmation bias is the tendency to notice, remember, and prioritize information that supports what we already believe — while ignoring or minimizing information that challenges it.
It operates quietly.
You read an article and notice the paragraph that agrees with you.
You remember the data point that reinforces your position.
You dismiss contradictory evidence as flawed or biased.
It feels like you are observing reality.
But you are filtering it.
This is not a moral flaw. It is a cognitive tendency. The brain prefers coherence. It resists friction. It protects identity.
And that is precisely why the split matters.
There is a real world.
But your access to it is mediated through perception, interpretation, and belief — and confirmation bias can distort that interpretation before reasoning even begins.
Left unchecked, confirmation bias turns ideas into identity. It blurs the line between model and reality. It increases confidence without increasing alignment.
Disciplined thinkers learn to ask:
What evidence would change my mind?
What am I overlooking?
Am I defending a belief — or testing it?
Recognizing confirmation bias does not eliminate it.
But awareness creates distance.
Distance creates choice.
And choice restores calibration.