today our guest is vladimir spiredonov, professor, doctor of psychological sciences, head of the cognitiveesearch laboratory of ranhiks. hello. hello, vladimir. and egor plotnikov, artist. hello. don't be scared, this is a special composition of two, it would seem, against causal attribution, i specifically pronounce it in full so that you understand that psychologists , scientists, too, have terms, for example, an employee did not bring a report, a report, some work on time, why is he lazy, unpunctual, i did not do something on time, well, each of us does not do something on time, that's how the circumstances turned out, i was in the way, the dog was sick, the electricity did not work, and in general the task was bigger than i thought, right? very often we quarrel because we attribute some actions of a person explanation of his qualities, someone said a rude word, he is a boor, right, someone answered at the wrong time, he is a slob, but we are good, we are wonderful, but doesn’t it seem to you that the desire to be good is such a powerful source of all sorts of cognitive errors.