psychology
Thirty years later, Perkins would be appointed by President Franklin Roosevelt as secretary of labor—the first woman member of a presidential cabinet. Appalled by what she witnessed at the Triangle fire, and how preventable the deaths could have been had the employees had better working conditions—as simple as fire escapes and unlocked
... See moreMorgan Housel • Same as Ever: Timeless Lessons on Risk, Opportunity and Living a Good Life
.fact
Intensity matching yields predictions that are as extreme as the evidence on which they are based, leading people to give the same answer to two quite different questions:
Daniel Kahneman • Thinking, Fast and Slow
He avoids auto-scheduling tools , believing that manually coordinating meetings preserves his intentionality and responsibility over his time.
every.to • Sailing Against the Current of Frictionless AI
As Harvard professor Teresa Amabile discusses in her book The Progress Principle, meaningful work is the number-one thing people want from their jobs.
Eric Barker • Barking Up the Wrong Tree: The Surprising Science Behind Why Everything You Know About Success Is (Mostly) Wrong
We resist the seductive luxury of registering and reacting to just a single (trigger) feature of the available information when an issue is important to us.
Robert B. Cialdini • Influence, New and Expanded: The Psychology of Persuasion
.psychology
You didn’t choose the robbery, but it’s still your responsibility to manage the emotional and psychological (and legal) fallout of the experience.
Mark Manson • The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life (Mark Manson Collection Book 1)
.psychology
Kaczynski had made lightly; he’d developed an entire philosophy to justify it. Influenced by techno-dystopian writers like Aldous Huxley and Jacques Ellul, Kaczynski believed the Industrial Revolution had turned society into a cold process of production and consumption that was gradually crushing everything humans valued most: freedom, happiness,
... See moreGurwinder • Why Everything Is Becoming a Game
Of course, the blessings of optimism are offered only to individuals who are only mildly biased and who are able to “accentuate the positive” without losing track of reality.
Daniel Kahneman • Thinking, Fast and Slow
For example, after the Korean War, Chinese interrogators got American prisoners of war to collaborate using this tactic. First, they asked them to make very small concessions such as writing and signing innocuous statements like “America is not perfect.”
But then, when these statements were read publicly across the prison camp, the prisoner was
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