How to Unlearn Anything

You can’t pour tea into a full cup

Diana Bernardo
SkillUp Ed

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“The first problem for all of us, men and women, is not to learn, but to unlearn”,

— Gloria Steinem

We start learning the day we are born. Before we even get close to a school class, we are already shaped in so many ways. Children learn by observing others and encoding their behavior. This is called “observational learning” and it shows that kids learn from the “models” around them, from parents to extended family, peers, or even characters on children TV.

People are social animals. From a very young age, we learn how to behave in groups. A 2016 study from Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, revealed that “three-year-olds not only learn social norms from direct instruction and prohibition — as traditionally assumed, but also seek norms themselves — even inferring them where adults see none”.

The same study goes on to state that “Preschool children commit the fallacy originally pointed out by the Scottish philosopher David Hume to derive what ought to be from what is”.

While this is essential for our growth as humans and our ability to interact with others, we also end up learning many things that are not necessarily true. Or useful. Or maybe they were…

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