A point I haven’t seen is that the “Different Worlds” hypothesis implies that if you consistently have an experience, especially interpersonally, you should on the margin expect it to happen more often relative to what conventional wisdom says.
Example: If your reports or partners consistently get angry when you do X, then decent chance that even if that isn’t all that common, you’re inadvertently selecting for people for whom it is, so don’t update as far down on the likelihood of it happening again as you otherwise might
A point I haven’t seen is that the “Different Worlds” hypothesis implies that if you consistently have an experience, especially interpersonally, you should on the margin expect it to happen more often relative to what conventional wisdom says.
Example: If your reports or partners consistently get angry when you do X, then decent chance that even if that isn’t all that common, you’re inadvertently selecting for people for whom it is, so don’t update as far down on the likelihood of it happening again as you otherwise might