psychology
There are three things going on here: the misremembering of the past; selective reporting by journalists and activists; and the feeling that as long as things are bad it’s heartless to say they are getting better.
Ola Rosling • Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About The World - And Why Things Are Better Than You Think
This is why a man should never give more attention to a woman who is withdrawing her attention.
Bruno De Campos • Love Is a Hunt
We must never forget to factor in the habitual mindset. Every situation is a combination of habitual and in-the-moment goals and motivation—our attic’s structure and its current state, so to speak.
Maria Konnikova • Mastermind
.psychology
The main obstacle is that subjective confidence is determined by the coherence of the story one has constructed, not by the quality and amount of the information that supports it.
Daniel Kahneman • Thinking, Fast and Slow
Even George Washington wanted to be called ‘His Mightiness, the President of the United States’; and Columbus pleaded for the title ‘Admiral of the Ocean and Viceroy of India’.
Dale Carnegie • How to Win Friends and Influence People
feeling stupid for not having understood something before just shows that you are now cleverer than you were then.
Eugenia Cheng • How to Bake Pi
The frontier also tends to forge tribes that are more democratic and meritocratic (and less status-conscious), have fewer laws and policies, and bias toward empiricism over theory (because theory encodes facts about older environments). All of these cultural institutions help keep tribes more flexible, so they're more able to adapt when change
... See moreKevin Simler • Startups are Frontier Communities
You will never get into trouble by admitting that you may be wrong. That will stop all argument and inspire your opponent to be just as fair and open and broadminded as you are. It will make him want to admit that he, too, may be wrong.
Dale Carnegie • How to Win Friends and Influence People
Excellence requires repetition. Even if you’ve got passion and purpose perfectly aligned and completely love what you do, what you do is often reduced to a daily checklist. This means a portion of peak performance is always sculpted out of Wallace’s hallmarks of adult life: boredom, routine, and petty frustration.
Steven Kotler • The Art of Impossible
.psychology