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Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment
Sunstein, Cass R. & Sibony, Olivier & Kahneman, Daniel • 2021
The book explores "noise"—unwanted variability in human judgment—as a pervasive and neglected source of error, distinct from bias. Using analogies and noise audits in various fields like justice, medicine, and business, it reveals that noise is often "scandalously high" and far more impactful than commonly perceived, accumulating rather than cancelling out. The text details how noise arises from psychological heuristics, individual cognitive styles, group dynamics, and the inherent limits of human matching operations. It advocates for "decision hygiene" strategies like structured assessments, independent judgments, and algorithmic tools to reduce noise, arguing that while zero noise may be impractical, recognizing and actively combating it is crucial for improving fairness, accuracy, and efficiency in professional decisions.
Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets
Nassim Nicholas Taleb
The book synthesizes the author's experiences with uncertainty, blending practical risk-taking with literary insights. It explores how humans routinely misinterpret randomness, often mistaking luck for skill, particularly in finance. The author critiques conventional approaches to probability, highlighting cognitive biases like hindsight bias and survivorship bias. Emphasizing the presence of "black swans"—rare, high-impact events—the book advocates for skepticism, stoicism, and a deep understanding of asymmetric outcomes. Through anecdotes and thought experiments, it argues that awareness of our susceptibility to randomness, rather than intellectual confidence, is crucial for navigating an unpredictable world, ultimately questioning traditional notions of success and competence.
Dan Ariely's work challenges the notion of rational human choice, revealing how internal forces like emotions and expectations lead to systematic, predictable errors. Through engaging experiments, he illustrates cognitive biases such as relativity, anchoring, and the powerful allure of "free." The text explores the clash between social and market norms, the impact of arousal on decision-making, and our struggles with procrastination and self-control. It highlights how ownership inflates value, the irrational urge to keep options open, and how expectations and stereotypes profoundly shape perception. Ultimately, Ariely demonstrates that understanding these inherent irrationalities is crucial for making better choices in personal and professional life.
The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable
Nassim Nicholas Taleb
The book explores the concept of the Black Swan—unpredictable, high-impact events that are retrospectively rationalized. It critiques humanity's blindness to these rare occurrences, especially the reliance on flawed Gaussian models that ignore extreme deviations. The author advocates for "epistemic humility," shifting from prediction to preparedness, and adopting a "barbell strategy" to limit vulnerability to negative Black Swans while maximizing exposure to positive ones. He highlights cognitive biases like the narrative fallacy and confirmation bias, and exposes the "ludic fallacy" of applying sterilized game-like risks to complex real-world uncertainty, particularly in financial systems, arguing for a society robust to error rather than one built on false predictability.