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Top 20Showing 1–9 of 9
Thinking in bets : making smarter decisions when you don’t have all the facts
Annie Duke • 2018
The author, a former cognitive psychology student turned professional poker player, argues that life is more akin to poker than chess due to incomplete information and uncertainty. Her book introduces "thinking in bets" as a framework to improve decision-making by objectively separating the quality of a decision from its outcome. It highlights pervasive cognitive biases like "resulting," motivated reasoning, and self-serving bias that hinder rational learning. The text advocates for expressing beliefs probabilistically, actively vetting evidence, and cultivating truthseeking habits. It also promotes forming diverse accountability groups and using mental time travel techniques, such as premortems and Ulysses contracts, to mitigate impulsive choices and foster long-term rational thinking in an uncertain world.
The Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail Š but Some Don't
Nate Silver • 2012
The book explores the art and science of prediction, arguing that human judgment often fails due to biases, information overload, and misinterpretation of noisy data. It critiques the overconfidence in "Big Data" and simplified models across diverse fields like finance, politics, sports, and health. Advocating for a Bayesian approach, the author emphasizes probabilistic thinking, continuous updating of forecasts, and aggregating diverse perspectives. By understanding the inherent subjectivity of prediction, acknowledging uncertainty, and focusing on robust processes over outcomes, individuals and institutions can make more accurate forecasts, mitigating catastrophic errors and improving decision-making in an increasingly complex world.
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.
Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World – and Why Things Are Better Than You Think
Hans Rosling
The book "Factfulness" by Hans Rosling, with Ola Rosling and Anna Rosling Rönnlund, challenges our dramatic and often negative worldview. It reveals how ten dramatic instincts—like the gap, negativity, fear, and blame instincts—distort our perception of global progress and lead to systemic misconceptions about the world. Through data-driven insights and engaging anecdotes, the authors demonstrate that the world is, in many ways, improving significantly, with declining extreme poverty, increasing life expectancy, and stabilizing child populations. The book advocates for a fact-based worldview to overcome these biases, make better decisions, and maintain realistic hope, rather than succumbing to an overly pessimistic outlook. It encourages critical thinking and continuous updating of our knowledge.
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.
The Undoing Project by Michael Lewis chronicles the extraordinary partnership between Israeli psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, whose groundbreaking research fundamentally reshaped our understanding of human decision-making. Lewis details their contrasting personalities, intellectual battles, and the revolutionary development of "Prospect Theory," which revealed how systematic cognitive biases and heuristics lead people to deviate from rational choices under uncertainty. Their work, initially met with skepticism from economists assuming human rationality, ultimately exposed inherent flaws in human intuition and profoundly influenced fields from economics and medicine to public policy, highlighting the enduring impact of their collaborative journey to map the errors of the mind.
Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction
Philip E. Tetlock & Dan Gardner
The book "Superforecasting" explores how ordinary individuals, dubbed "superforecasters," achieve superior accuracy in predicting global events, significantly outperforming experts and intelligence agencies. It challenges the notion that foresight is a mystical gift, instead arguing it's a skill cultivated through specific habits of thought: open-mindedness, self-criticism, and constant learning. The text highlights the importance of rigorous measurement, probabilistic thinking, and embracing uncertainty, drawing parallels with evidence-based medicine. It criticizes prevalent cognitive biases like confirmation bias and the "tip-of-your-nose" perspective, advocating for techniques like Fermi estimation and integrating "outside" and "inside" views. Ultimately, the book champions a "perpetual beta" mindset for continuous improvement, even suggesting that effective leadership can blend decisiveness with intellectual humility.
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.