You reached ___ points from a maximum score of 6!
"Each of the six beliefs is false, a possibility explicitly stated in the instruction. Beliefs 1 and 3 are illusions of certainty: significance tests provide probabilities, not certainties. Beliefs 2, 4, and 5 are versions of Bayesian wishful thinking. Belief 2 is incorrect because a p value is not the probability that the null hypothesis is true but rather the probability of the given data (or more extreme data), assuming the truth of the null hypothesis. For the same reason, one cannot deduce the probability that the experimental (alternative) hypothesis is true, as stated in Belief 4. Belief 5 makes essentially the same claim as Belief 2 because a wrong decision to reject the null hypothesis amounts to the null hypothesis actually being true, and again, the p value does not specify the probability that the null is true. Belief 6 has been dealt with in the previous section. Note that all six delusions err in the same direction of wishful thinking: They overestimate what can be concluded from a p value." (Gigerenzer, 2018, p. 206-207)