10 Questions for Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2024
  • Psychologist and Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman discusses his new book - 'Thinking, Fast and Slow' - and why our gut instincts are usually wrong
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Комментарии • 51

  • @BlogOozIe
    @BlogOozIe 12 лет назад +45

    What a personality. The combo of Daniel Kahneman's charisma and humility is enviable.

  • @krishnateja7728
    @krishnateja7728 6 лет назад +54

    409.. aww that made her humble. Attitude dropped down like a big avalanche.

    • @narennallapareddy2994
      @narennallapareddy2994 4 года назад +3

      I mean she should realize she's speaking with THE Daniel Kahneman.

    • @CristobalRuiz
      @CristobalRuiz 4 года назад +1

      Hahahaha LMAO and she even says "soooo close" So glad that helped her tune down her attitude.

  • @leversandpulleys9274
    @leversandpulleys9274 2 года назад +4

    4:48 "We use the word 'know' in peculiar ways and that strengthen the illusion that we understand the world when we really don't"
    that.

  • @leolok2632
    @leolok2632 7 лет назад +15

    Agreed. The TIME interviewer should not interrupt intervene or bombard with multiple questions or questionnaire list. Allow Kahneman to continue his thoughts. Let the exchange flow naturally. She should just LISTEN.

    • @jaredmowry8544
      @jaredmowry8544 2 года назад

      She’s disgustingly off-putting. She needs to find a new career field. Couldn’t bear to finish the video, exclusively because of her pigeon-face annoyance.

  • @MindAgilis
    @MindAgilis 10 лет назад +4

    Very insightful. Being aware of the strengths and weaknesses of our more 'instinctive' System 1 should translate into better decision-making. What else can we do to improve our decision-making and problem-solving skills? Could video games help in areas such as impulse control, mental flexibility, and planning?

  • @grigor.dimitrov
    @grigor.dimitrov 9 лет назад +4

    The description is wrong, it says that "our gut instincts are usually wrong" whereas the book argues that our gut instincts are usually right but there are systematic deviations, also called biases

    • @ico2246
      @ico2246 9 лет назад

      Ajamm si pero no es intuición sino experiencia que han ganado expertos por la repetición continúa de ciertos actos como explica en el ejemplo del ajedrez el jugador experimentado (el experto) ya tiene miles des jugadas en su memoria es por eso que recurre a alguna con mayor facilidad.

    • @ico2246
      @ico2246 9 лет назад

      Perdón corrijo instinto.

    • @grigor.dimitrov
      @grigor.dimitrov 9 лет назад

      David Salces Кво? Не

  • @gggrrr00
    @gggrrr00 9 лет назад +5

    What he's proposing, that people should not be so confident about their positions, and that they over-rely on their own intuition is Very counter cultural today. Everyone preaches confidence and our own flawed EGO's like to think we are right. Well, he's just saying consider data and broad perspectives and measures info most, and then your "gut" second and after that. The EGO people will attack that notion - but in fact he's being very reasonable here - which in fact most people are not, they like to service their own Egos. This is a great, revolutionary book, read it.

    • @Danzelblock
      @Danzelblock 9 лет назад

      Hank MoHank Conman is the sort of cowardly proponent of the analytic, always glorifying the value of linear thought, and the function of short-term memory - receiving praises only from a public with an already inflated sense of intellectual worth (IQ theory). It remains so, the greatest philosophers of mind have always supported intuition and the freedom in selecting elements of thought (Von Neumann called it art), while the laymen will always cower behind analysis, as if it somehow makes up for their lack of worldly achievements. Very few minds in Western societies today, given the presence of the biases against intuition, heuristic, and creative thought, can flourish, but still the evidence of the powers of intuition prevails, thought most often, in the one in a million types, who come to change the world. Confidence isn't something that gives us the right answer - that's the structure of our brain. Confidence arises when someone is used to being right.

  • @siditah
    @siditah Месяц назад

    His humility is disarming.

  • @Influences
    @Influences 10 лет назад +7

    I loved the interview except for the part about "not being a fan" of intuition. I don't think the Dr is not a fan of intuition. I think there's a difference between just "going with our gut" and using knowledgeable intuition. For example, I would trust a doctor to stitch up my hand if I needed a few stitches because I trust his intuition in medicine. When we practice something for long periods of time, we effectively train our intuition in a particular field. That could have been expressed.

  • @marcellovacca3155
    @marcellovacca3155 3 года назад +4

    My system 1 says the interviewer didn't read the book.

  • @kinder1234ify
    @kinder1234ify 12 лет назад

    what for example?

  • @rahulkhan-no6rc
    @rahulkhan-no6rc 4 года назад

    Nice voice

  • @mikiallen7733
    @mikiallen7733 2 года назад +1

    Q 11 - The famed Hakkanson paradox is as follows: if markets are complete and options are redudant, why would someone need them?

  • @damdinsurensolongo1210
    @damdinsurensolongo1210 4 года назад

    Very impressive interview

  • @supriya55
    @supriya55 12 лет назад +3

    am so reading that book

  • @MrCassavius
    @MrCassavius 12 лет назад +13

    I cant stand that woman. The interrviews are ok, but she's really annoying (a perception made over several clips, not at first sight)

  • @DistortedV12
    @DistortedV12 8 лет назад +12

    This interview...was...
    ?
    terrible.

  • @doug2731
    @doug2731 2 года назад

    Edituh At Laaaahhhj

  • @GreatMan_from_East
    @GreatMan_from_East 2 года назад

    Great Scholar

  • @shortfunnyvideos9274
    @shortfunnyvideos9274 3 года назад

    Curb your Nobel Prize

  • @TheTHUSWORD
    @TheTHUSWORD 2 года назад

    am a psychologist and not an economist that hit hard.

  • @LouisDamMikkelsen
    @LouisDamMikkelsen 12 лет назад

    @mstrephoenix1 Trade in some of that rage for proper grammar and cogency before denigrating someone.

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 Год назад

    5:10 - I’m not: Buck$ 💵💰

  • @Yuri92001
    @Yuri92001 12 лет назад

    @mstrephoenix1 The only question is how long it is going to take to get enough spam markers and/or thumbs down on your asinine posts.

  • @zolapoe
    @zolapoe 12 лет назад

    Exactly the opposite of Ken Robinson, who's very talented at speaking in public but whose writing is just 'bland'.

  • @moviedude22
    @moviedude22 12 лет назад

    @mstrephoenix1 haha so what?

  • @krishnateja7728
    @krishnateja7728 6 лет назад +10

    terrible interviewer! come on he's a Nobel Prize winner, not any of your nosy neighbor Joe!

  • @SandeepKulshrestha
    @SandeepKulshrestha Месяц назад

    Rest in peace, Professor Kahneman. The interviewer in this video is not qualified

  • @kehindeonakunle5730
    @kehindeonakunle5730 3 года назад +2

    The questions are grossly incompetent, ineffective, infantile

  • @Danzelblock
    @Danzelblock 9 лет назад

    Conman is the sort of cowardly proponent of the analytic, always glorifying the value of linear thought, and the function of short-term memory - receiving praises only from a public with an already inflated sense of intellectual worth (IQ theory). It remains so, the greatest philosophers of mind have always supported intuition and the freedom in selecting elements of thought (Von Neumann called it art), while the laymen will always cower behind analysis, as if it somehow makes up for their lack of worldly achievements. Very few minds in Western societies today, given the presence of the biases against intuition, heuristic, and creative thought, can flourish, but still the evidence of the powers of intuition prevails, thought most often, in the one in a million types, who come to change the world.

    • @tom123knightley
      @tom123knightley 6 лет назад +2

      absolute rubbish. if you have read the book then you haven't understood it and should try again.

  • @Pfsif
    @Pfsif 7 лет назад

    Another Jew saying Bush is an idiot.

  • @cz1730
    @cz1730 3 года назад

    We can‘t stand with this woman.

  • @homanasiri843
    @homanasiri843 2 месяца назад

    Only a liberal Pres can think 😂

  • @captainyas
    @captainyas 12 лет назад

    WOW. they must be giving nobel prizes away. seriousely, this guy?!

    • @siddharthraychaudhuri7250
      @siddharthraychaudhuri7250 5 лет назад +6

      And you came to your conclusion by watching a 6 minute video?? Now wonder he was given the Nobel prize! You would understand what I mean if you genuinely study his work.

    • @George-on5rb
      @George-on5rb 4 года назад +3

      His 700 page book influenced lots of economists but not 12 years old boys yet.

  • @homanasiri843
    @homanasiri843 2 месяца назад

    Trump is the best thinker

  • @relaxbro5605
    @relaxbro5605 4 месяца назад

    His book is full of errors and studies that can't be replicated...