Israel afforded many opportunities when i was growing up, and it probably still does. My grandson in the isrally army feels very free, you know, in inan intelligence unit. He feels that he can use his mind and that he can speak his mind,. It's going to be wonderful for his future. I wish i could peer into the future and know what comes next, but,you know, i can't. And i know that this is going to happen to everything that i believe will become irrelevant within a few decades.
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You might be surprised by what occupies Daniel Kahneman’s thoughts. “You seem to think that I think of bias all the time,” he tells Tyler. “I really don’t think of bias that much.” These days, noise might be the concept most on Kahneman’s mind. A forthcoming book, coauthored with Cass Sunstein and “a brilliant Frenchman you haven’t heard of” is about how random variability affects our decision-making. And while we’ve spent a lot of time studying how bias causes error in judgment, Kahneman says, we aren’t thinking nearly enough about the problem of noise.
In November, Kahneman joined Tyler for a live conversation about bias, noise and more, including happiness, memory, the replication crisis in psychology, advice to CEOs about improving decision-making, superforecasters, the influence of Freud, working in a second language, the value of intuition, and why he can’t help you win arguments with a spouse.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded November 12th, 2018 Other ways to connect