Hindsight Bias – is when you know the outcome of some process and you are overconfident that you would have predicted it. Even if you would educate people that they have hindsight bias this doesn't change their overconfidence. This is connected to My-side bias.

Experiment. You ask people to predict the outcome of some unfamiliar historical event, in which there are four potential outcome (the real experiment was based on a conflict between Gurkhas and British in 1814). 1) Victory A, 2) Victory B, 3) Deadlock without peace, 4) Deadlock with peace. And you have five groups. One that you don't tell what outcome have happened. And four others you are telling each different version of what have happened. In the table below there are real answers on what they declared they would answer. I marked on red the highest number in each column. Result: if you are gonna be told the outcome you will think you would have predicted it.

Hindsight

Alternative name: “I would have known this bias”

Personal example:

Mind flipping to confidence.

I was half asleep and I heard a noise, my dream flipped to explain the noise as yawning. The story had a previous narrative and yawning make sense in it. It is as if my brain have created whole story and flipped to it as if to make a present sensation make sense.

‣ confirmed a similar dynamic. There is a way to serve one part of brain a command and ask another why are you doing it. When asked one to stand up to go for a coke and ask other why you are standing up – the other manufactured a fake story and the reason.