Thinking, Fast and Slow
by Daniel Kahneman
4/5
Farrar, Straus and Giroux 499 pages October 25, 2011
Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman takes us on a groundbreaking tour of the mind and explains the two systems that drive the way we think. System 1 is fast, intuitive, and emotional; System 2 is slower, more deliberative, and more logical.
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Jim's Review
🐛
Dense but absolutely worth the effort. Kahneman changed how Jim thinks about... well, thinking. You'll never trust your gut the same way again after learning about anchoring, the availability heuristic, and loss aversion. System 1 is fast and confident and WRONG more often than you'd ever guess. Jim's favorite part is the parade of cognitive biases that make you go "oh no, I do that ALL the time." The planning fallacy? Jim used to think every book would take one weekend. The sunk cost fallacy? Jim once finished a terrible 600-page novel just because he'd already read 400 pages. Kahneman doesn't just identify these bugs in human thinking — he shows you the research behind them in fascinating detail. The Prospect Theory chapters alone won him a Nobel Prize, and reading them makes you feel like you're getting a peek behind the curtain of reality. Fair warning: it's a LONG read, and some chapters require serious concentration. Jim needed a few sessions and some strong coffee. But each chapter is a revelation, and the cumulative effect is life-changing. You'll start noticing cognitive biases everywhere — in the news, in your own decisions, in arguments with friends. Essential reading for anyone who has a brain and wants to use it better. Four worms — a masterwork of behavioral science.
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