Hindsight Bias and the Quiet Judgment We Place on Ourselves
There are moments in life when we look back and quietly sigh, telling ourselves, “I should have known.” Maybe it was a relationship that didn’t work out, a job opportunity we didn’t take, a financial decision that didn’t go as planned, or even something as small as ignoring a gut feeling about a situation. Looking back, the answer suddenly feels obvious. We convince ourselves that the signs were always there, that the outcome was predictable, and that we somehow failed to see what now feels crystal clear. In those moments, the harshest critic in the room is often not the world around us, it’s the voice inside our own head. Psychology has a name for this experience: hindsight bias. Hindsight bias, or the “I-knew-it-all-along” phenomenon , is a cognitive bias where people falsely perceive past events as having been more predictable than they actually were. After an event occurs, individuals trick themselves into believing they foresaw the outcome, leading to overconfidence, memory distor...