Quote from darkhorse:
Yes. This speaks to a basic observation: The average individual, whether in markets or out of markets, does not know how to think critically.
Critical thinking skills are just that, skills. As with any skillset, training and practice are required. in some ways, analytical capability is comparable to physical strength - you build physical strength through a consistent routine requiring exercise and effort. You build analytical chops the same way.
Modern society is structured as such that the average individual does not have to think much at all. Most of what we call 'education' is actually rote memorization. Committing a list of facts to memory, or plugging in algebra formulas in step by step fashion for a math test, is not thinking critically. It is the brain's equivalent to following instructions on an assembly line.
Similarly, most modern life activities are rote-routine based. You do not have to think, not really, to balance a checkbook, drive a car, or handle most routine-based jobs where an ability to understand and follow instructions constitutes 90% of performance.
The problem is not alleviated at higher levels of education. There are legions of ivy league rote routine followers, many of whom are paid very large amounts, and who have memorized larger and more complex bodies of facts, or practiced more complex routines - but still, the bulk of these individuals have not learned to think for themselves.
This is one reason why the markets are humbling for so many. If you cannot or will not think for yourself, your best hope is to latch on to someone else's system or methodology, and hope that it works for as long as possible. The alternative is being forced to think critically, which most people are simply terrible at doing. They have very little practice at it, and feel resentful when forced to do it. As Bertrand Russell has said, many men would rather die than think, and in fact do so.