Nature - Corollary

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Nature
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It's better to travel than to arrive..

Corollary (Lyrics)

"Thought I'd try'n better explain my Corollary, It's my compass of motives, it's a pride to me it's my compass of motifs, so all Lionee! it's my compass of motives so no gravity, it's my compass of motives so don't lie to me, n' all these powers that shouldn't be they annoying me, Got the heart of a hunter so I'll fight the fiends, and got the soul of a hero so I don't like the scene...of millions being murdered right in front of me, I got too many new problems with new society I got too many new songs now all up inside of me, I got plenty in the dockyard and I'm not greedy, I think you've got a problem with reality n I don't live in WaWa Land so I'm trans-phobic but none of you gonna make it less i unleash the fleet always on summits polemical I digress..Sorry! Always making something seminal- digest my Queens!I won't make them suffer I'll be nice and brief Hope that better explains my 'Corollary' ....Parables of destruction are a sign I've been...
(Hook) 'Am on my shizzle like a Rockstar, where will I hit them Ima Southpaw I always bring a 'Contra-jersey' and wear that shit on backwards...'
Then it's back to the jab! anotha catchy hook! RE-peat! Stomping giants down in several foe/fee/ Fido dreams! Bless all still in the Homeland of The True Brave and the Free, Ma peepls know to bury me wit a mic and a beat..You can't leave my chains on though cause I don't have any!" Nature © 2024

The outcome bias is a cognitive bias that leads people to judge decisions mainly based on their outcomes, in a way that’s irrelevant to the true quality of those decisions.
For example, the outcome bias can cause someone to believe that it was a smart idea to take an unnecessary risk, just because they got lucky and ended up being fine.
This bias can cause issues like punishing good decisions and rewarding bad ones, in cases where associated outcomes were determined mainly by uncontrollable factors, like luck.
This bias can be caused by mechanisms like a desire to feel better about decisions that were made, a preference for spending less effort evaluating decisions, and flawed cognitive reconstruction of chains of events (when people start with known outcomes, and then work backward to try to justify their causes).
To reduce this bias, you can judge a decision before knowing its outcome, minimize the salience of information relating to the outcome, and consider how you would judge a decision if it led to a different outcome.