IAmSinistar: EDIT: Also, there is the fact that some people are wired such that conformity triggers the reward circuit in the brain. They see others whom they perceive as social peers doing the same things they do, and this gives them a hit of positive reinforcement. Conversely, when they see such peers not doing as they do, this is a negative hit. This kind of wiring has some benefits towards group cohesion, but it is also a detriment towards individuality and innovation. At its extreme it leads to people who cannot conceive of others thinking differently from themselves and still being valid humans.
grimwerk: This is something I'd like to read about. Perhaps it'd lead me to make more sensible decisions in the future!
Behavioural neurobiology is fascinating, and it can indeed help you understand your own thought processes better, as well as those of others. I don't take a completely reductionist view that we are just chemical machinery, but nonetheless our wiring exerts a powerful influence over our natures, and it behooves us to comprehend it if we want to transcend it.
toxicTom: But there's also the other type of folly of constantly doubting one's own decisions and living in regret for every single choice made, because
it could have been better if I only... and then looking for consolation and guidance with other people (priests, gurus, führers) and religion - to get rid of the responsibility to make one's own decisions and thus of the self-doubting.
Many of us desire greatly to be shriven of our sins, perhaps in part due to a notion that if any part of the self is imperfect, the whole of the self is worthless. Others of us accept the human condition for what it is, and carry the weight of our vices, which (if we deign to be a good person) we try to counterbalance by a greater measure of virtue.