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Hi 👋🏻
One of the things I dislike the most is superiority complexes.
A lot of people think that whatever they believe or say is right, and that everyone else is wrong.
The funny part is that their knowledge usually comes from a mix of random sources, while they assume the rest. That is a deadly combination.
In this newsletter, let’s talk about it.
Why certainty feels so convincing
In many cases, people are simply protecting the version of themselves they have built around certain beliefs and opinions. Once someone becomes emotionally attached to an idea, they struggle to accept disagreement because that idea is already tied to their identity.
And the worst part is that if you try to have a conversation with them to help them understand the difference between what is right and what is wrong, they immediately start defending their identity. The discussion stops being a conversation and turns into a battle between you and that person. That is why I avoid talking deeply with a lot of people. They are not there to listen. They are only there to speak.
Confidence itself is not a bad thing, but people often confuse confidence with correctness. Someone who speaks loudly and decisively can appear intelligent even when their understanding is shallow. Meanwhile, people who genuinely understand a subject deeply are usually more careful with their words because they recognise how complex reality actually is.
Partial knowledge creates false confidence
Most of the opinions you hear today are built on fragmented information. People consume short videos, ragebait posts, and surface-level explanations, then fill the missing gaps with assumptions. After repeating those assumptions long enough, they start treating them like facts. Because if you keep saying a lie 1000s of times, then it becomes true.
Why confidence fools people
Actual knowledge creates humility
The more someone truly learns, the more they realise how complex most subjects are. People with a deeper understanding usually leave room for uncertainty because they know reality is not that easy. In contrast, people with a shallow understanding often speak in absolutes because they cannot see the bigger picture.
How social media made it worse
Platforms reward extreme opinions
Social media encourages people to sound certain because extreme opinions attract attention faster than balanced perspectives. Nuanced thinking requires patience, but the internet won’t reward things that are right!
A better way to approach disagreements
Accept that nobody knows everything
Every person operates with limited experiences and incomplete information. if you accept that reality, then it will make conversations healthier because it removes the need to constantly prove superiority.
Stay open to learning
Changing your opinion after learning something new is a sign of maturity. The people who continue growing are usually the ones who remain curious instead of pretending they already have all the answers.
Thanks for reading 🙂
I really dislike a superiority complex. You can’t say that you’re always right, always listen to others, but never trust anything from anyone.
Do your own research.
Thanks for reading G! See ya!
— Anirban
Book I’m reading this week:
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is a historical fiction novel that follows Amir, a privileged Afghan boy, as he navigates guilt, friendship, and redemption, spanning from the fall of the Afghan monarchy to the Taliban regime!
1 thing I learnt this week:
Butterflies can taste with their feet! They have sensors on their legs that help them locate food and identify the best plants to lay their eggs on, which ensures their caterpillars have an immediate food source.
Tool stack I use:
Fathom: AI notetaker + recorder.
Notion: My second brain.
Beehiiv: My newsletter tool.
Toggl: My time tracking tool.





