MP3 Audio Sample
Short Synopsis
A popular science writer explores new research into the many shortcuts that our minds use to make snap decisions—and explains how they help, how they hurt, and how we can overrule them.
Full Synopsis
Our brains are marvels, hard-wired by millions of years of evolution to boast a number of mental shortcuts, biases, and tricks that allow us to negotiate our complicated lives without overthinking every choice and decision we have to make. Unfortunately, those ancient shortcuts don't always work to our advantage in our modern lives—when we don't also think slowly and rationally, those hard-wired habits can trip us up. This intriguing book helps us to understand how our minds are predisposed to think about the world—and how to avoid many of life's common mistakes.
Among the surprising examples of these mental habits at work in our lives:
—Experienced skiers make fatal mistakes on familiar terrain more often than less experienced ones.
—Ninety-nine point nine percent of the citizens of France are registered organ donors, but only 28 percent of Americans are.
—Early birds on jury duty are more likely to succumb to racial stereotypes in delivering verdicts when the day gets late.
—People who are hungry for lunch will donate less money to charity.
Wray Herbert introduces us to twenty of these shortcuts and biases, explaining how they affect us in the real world and how they're being studied in labs around the world.
Author Wray Herbert
Narrated by Dan John Miller
Publication date Sep 14, 2010
Running time 9 hrs
Available Formats
audio download