Thinking, Fast and SlowMajor New York Times bestseller |
From inside the book
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... EXPERIENCED WELL-BEING THINKING ABOUT LIFE CONCLUSIONS 199 209 222 234 245 255 269 278 289 300 310 322 334 342 353 363 377 386 391 398 408 THINKING, FAST AND SLOW This page intentionally left blank. INTRODUCTION. APPENDIX A: JUDGMENT ...
... experience as you read the question about Steve the librarian, which was intended to help you appreciate the power of resemblance as a cue to probability and to see how easy it is to ignore relevant statistical facts. The use of ...
... experience of agency, choice, and concentration. The labels of System 1 and System 2 are widely used in psychology, but I go further than most in this book, which you can read as a psychodrama with two characters. When we think of ...
... experience oftrying not to stare at the oddly dressed couple at the neighboring table in a restaurant. We also know what it is like to force our attention on a boring book, when we constantly find ourselves returning to the point at ...
... experienced it if you tried Add-1 or Add-3, effort builds up with every added digit that you hear, reaches an almost ... experience: longer strings reliably caused larger dilations, the transformation task compounded the effort, and the ...