Pensar rápido, pensar despacio
Daniel Kahneman
Daniel Kahneman, uno de los pensadores más importantes del mundo, recibió el premio Nobel de Economía por su trabajo pionero en psicología sobre el modelo racional de la toma de decisiones. Sus ideas han tenido un profundo impacto en campos tan diversos como la economía, la medicina o la política, pero hasta ahora no había reunido la obra de su vida en un libro.
En Pensar rápido, pensar despacio, un éxito internacional, Kahneman nos ofrece una revolucionaria perspectiva del cerebro y explica los dos sistemas que modelan cómo pensamos. El sistema 1 es rápido, intuitivo y emocional, mientras que el sistema 2 es más lento, deliberativo y lógico. Kahneman expone la extraordinaria capacidad (y también los errores y los sesgos) del pensamiento rápido, y revela la duradera influencia de las impresiones intuitivas sobre nuestro pensamiento y nuestra conducta. El impacto de la aversión a la pérdida y el exceso de confianza en las estrategias empresariales, la dificultad de predecir lo que nos hará felices en el futuro, el reto de enmarcar adecuadamente los riesgos en el trabajo y en el hogar, el profundo efecto de los sesgos cognitivos sobre todo lo que hacemos, desde jugar en la Bolsa hasta planificar las vacaciones; todo esto solo puede ser comprendido si entendemos el funcionamiento conjunto de los dos sistemas a la hora de formular nuestros juicios y decisiones. Al implicar al lector en una animada reflexión sobre cómo pensamos, Kahneman consigue revelar cuándo podemos confiar en nuestras intuiciones y cuándo no, y de qué modo podemos aprovechar los beneficios del pensamiento lento. Además, ofrece enseñanzas prácticas e iluminadoras sobre cómo se adoptan decisiones en la vida profesional o personal, y sobre cómo podemos usar distintas técnicas para protegernos de los fallos mentales que nos crean problemas.
Pensar rápido, pensar despacio cambiará para siempre nuestra manera de pensar sobre cómo pensamos.
Fecha de publicación
2011-10-25T00:00:00.000Z
2011-10-25T00:00:00.000Z
Calificación de Goodreads
4.18
ISBN
9780141033570
Recomendaciones
30
Recomendaciones
2016-09-09T00:00:00.000Z
I love surprising scientific findings, as well as information about how our brains work. This is a treasure trove of both. Turns out, our brains are constantly misleading us. It’s not clear that learning how that’s the case reduces the chances of it happening, but it’s fascinating nonetheless. – fuente2018-07-05T21:52:21.000Z
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman -- Captivating dive into human decision making, marred by inclusion of several/many? psychology studies that fail to replicate. Will stand as a cautionary tale? – fuente2020-02-17T12:44:19.000Z
Get your hands on this if your can. This is the best book on understanding human behavior. #psychology #SEGAsBookClub 🤓 – fuente2022-04-02T17:10:55.000Z
@AlbertBridgeCap Thinking Fast & Slow is one of my favorite books (unsurprisingly). – fuente2020-02-11T06:15:11.000Z
If you liked “Predictably Irrational” or “Stumbling on Happiness” or any of those pop-psychology books, well, this is the Godfather of all of their work. Huge thorough book gives a great overview of much of his work. Read the other quotes on Amazon about it. – fuente2022-03-18T06:40:23.000Z
Operationalizing #AI >> Decision-making often comes down to resolving the conflict in our minds between the “impulsive, automatic, intuitive” and the “thoughtful, deliberate, calculating” systems of thinking.
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Brilliant book "Thinking, Fast and Slow": – fuente2013-12-25T23:58:17.000Z
@periodicvideos can't recommend 'Thinking Fast and Slow' highly enough. I'm reading 'David and Goliath' now, which has its moments – fuente2022-04-02T12:52:01.000Z
10 key lessons from the book:
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
A thread🧵👇 – fuente2021-01-15T17:43:29.000Z
A few weeks ago, @vulture asked me to describe 10 books that have impacted me along the way. List just out: Chinua Achebe, Dorothy Day, Éilís Ní Dhuibhne, Ralph Ellison, Bernard Malamud, Doris Kearns Goodwin, & more: – fuente2017-03-02T17:28:15.000Z
@Bradley_James2 Misbehaving? Thinking Fast and Slow. Undoing Project. – fuente2018-03-12T10:40:01.000Z
Fun list of 20 cognitive biases screwing up our decisions. The best book on this topic I ever read was of course Daniel Kahneman's "Thinking, fast and slow". It's one of the few books I would label as essential reading for nearly everyone. Full list here: – fuente2020-12-04T21:47:18.000Z
@geriwithetc @TwinsKevin @mayawiley @BeschlossDC @AliVelshi @kaitlancollins @scribe827 @ChrisCuomo I am an absolute maniac on the topic of cognitive biases of evey flavor. So much fun. (The “bible” is Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman’s book, Thinking, Fast and Slow.) – fuente2021-02-24T19:43:43.000Z
The book “Thinking, Fast and Slow” by Daniel Kahneman - a psychologist and the winner of the Nobel Prize in economics - has become essential reading in many baseball front offices and among coaching staffs. – fuenteCovers all three phases of the author's career: his early days working oncognitive bias, his work on prospect theory, and his later work on happiness. – fuente
2020-10-21T21:04:34.000Z
ICYMI: My choice of the best five Books on critical thinking @five_books – fuente2022-03-02T03:46:05.000Z
@huishhodl That's an incredible book! We have a summary guide of the book here if it's helpful to you. – fuente2015-09-25T22:19:36.000Z
@jasonzweigwsj is right -- Superforecasting is most important book since Thinking, Fast & Slow @ptetlock @dgardner – fuente2015-10-19T13:00:22.000Z
@warwickmansell you should read Daniel Kahneman's book (Thinking Fast and Slow) - you'd enjoy it I think. – fuente2020-08-02T13:03:08.000Z
Thinking Fast and Slow - Book review
A Noble Prize winner giving away his secrets in a single book! An INCREDIBLE MUST BUY:
- Loaded with insights, stories, case studies
- Stunning revelations of our mind.
C pics 4 detailed book review & more here - – fuente2021-01-17T14:03:45.000Z
@Qwyntessence A tough read but an awesome book. Their biography is also a great read. – fuenteI started reading Thinking, Fast and Slow and I became increasingly convinced of my own fickleness and inability to actually act rationally in life. – fuente