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Essentialism : the disciplined pursuit of less
Greg McKeown • 2014
Essentialism advocates for the disciplined pursuit of "less but better," challenging the notion that one can achieve everything. It emphasizes making the wisest investment of time and energy on truly vital activities, rather than merely getting more done. The book outlines a four-part systematic approach: understanding the Essentialist mindset, discerning the vital few from the trivial many, eliminating non-essentials by gracefully saying no and making strategic trade-offs, and designing systems for effortless execution. By prioritizing choice, protecting one's assets like sleep, and setting clear boundaries, individuals can regain control, achieve significant professional momentum, and live a more meaningful and purposeful life, free from the paradox of success that often diffuses effort.
The book “Thinking, Fast and Slow” explores two systems of thought: System 1 (fast, intuitive, emotional) and System 2 (slow, deliberative, logical). It reveals how System 1 often generates automatic judgments and heuristics that lead to systematic biases and errors, while the "lazy" System 2 frequently fails to override or correct these intuitions. The text details various cognitive biases like the availability heuristic, representativeness, anchoring, loss aversion, and the endowment effect, demonstrating how they influence decision-making in personal and professional life. The author contrasts rational "Econs" with error-prone "Humans" and discusses the "two selves" – the experiencing self and the remembering self – whose perspectives on happiness and pain often diverge, highlighting the pervasive irrationality in human judgment and choice, and advocating for institutional checks and a better understanding of these cognitive mechanisms to improve decision-making.
This book investigates the systematic ways humans mispredict their future happiness, likening it to an optical illusion. It highlights how our unique capacity for prospection, or imagining the future, is prone to errors. These failures stem from subjective interpretations of happiness, the brain’s tendency to invent or ignore details in future scenarios, the powerful influence of present feelings on predictions, and the unconscious psychological immune system that rationalizes experiences. Memory biases further prevent learning from past mistakes, while a general reluctance to learn from others’ experiences compounds the issue. The book ultimately reveals the profound, predictable flaws in human foresight, making accurate future utility estimations a complex challenge.
Mindset: Changing the Way You Think to Fulfill Your Potential
Carol Dweck
The book "Mindset" by Carol Dweck explores the profound impact of our beliefs about our abilities on our lives. It introduces two core mindsets: the fixed mindset, which assumes qualities like intelligence are unchangeable, and the growth mindset, which believes abilities can be developed through effort, strategy, and help. The author illustrates how these mindsets influence success, failure, relationships, and leadership across various domains. The growth mindset fosters resilience, a love for learning, and a focus on improvement, while the fixed mindset can lead to a fear of challenge, defensiveness, and a constant need for validation. The book provides practical strategies to cultivate a true growth mindset, emphasizing continuous development and a process-oriented approach to life.