en

Daniel Kahneman

  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    An inability to be guided by a “healthy fear” of bad consequences is a disastrous flaw.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    Narrative fallacies arise inevitably from our continuous attempt to make sense of the world.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    A compelling narrative fosters an illusion of inevitability.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    You build the best possible story from the information available to you, and if it is a good story, you believe it. Paradoxically, it is easier to construct a coherent story when you know little, when there are fewer pieces to fit into the puzzle. Our comforting conviction that the world makes sense rests on a secure foundation: our almost unlimited ability to ignore our ignorance.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    To think clearly about the future, we need to clean up the language that we use in labeling the beliefs we had in the past.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    A general limitation of the human mind is its imperfect ability to reconstruct past states of knowledge, or beliefs that have changed. Once you adopt a new view of the world (or of any part of it), you immediately lose much of your ability to recall what you used to believe before your mind changed.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    Subjective confidence in a judgment is not a reasoned evaluation of the probability that this judgment is correct. Confidence is a feeling, which reflects the coherence of the information and the cognitive ease of processing it. It is wise to take admissions of uncertainty seriously, but declarations of high confidence mainly tell you that an individual has constructed a coherent story in his mind, not necessarily that the story is true.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    Subjective confidence in a judgment is not a reasoned evaluation of the probability that this judgment is correct. Confidence is a feeling, which reflects the coherence of the information and the cognitive ease of processing it. It is wise to take admissions of uncertainty seriously, but declarations of high confidence mainly tell you that an individual has constructed a coherent story in his mind, not necessarily that the story is true.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    The illusion of skill is not only an individual aberration; it is deeply ingrained in the culture of the industry. Facts that challenge such basic assumptions—and thereby threaten people’s livelihood and self-esteem—are simply not absorbed. The mind does not digest them. This is particularly true of statistical studies of performance, which provide base-rate information that people generally ignore when it clashes with their personal impressions from experience.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quotedlast year
    Those who know more forecast very slightly better than those who know less. But those with the most knowledge are often less reliable. The reason is that the person who acquires more knowledge develops an enhanced illusion of her skill and becomes unrealistically overconfident.
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