I've Read 50 Behavioral Economics Books - Here's 5 hidden gems

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • Get summaries of these books on Shortform: www.shortform.com/pete
    Links to books are here!
    The honest truth about dishonesty - Dan Ariely: amzn.to/3K4xN7f
    Talking to strangers - Malcolm Gladwell: amzn.to/3zpbyE7
    The elephant in the brain - Kevin Simler and Robin Hanson: amzn.to/430SjOU
    Think Again - Adam Grant: amzn.to/3nG81Pd
    7.5 lessons about the brain - Lisa Feldman Barrett: amzn.to/3GcDDSR
    Follow me:
    Behavioral Science Instagram: @petejudoofficial
    Instagram: @petejudo
    Twitter: @petejudo
    LinkedIn: Peter Judodihardjo

Комментарии • 77

  • @hendrikvandenberg
    @hendrikvandenberg 11 месяцев назад

    Spot on! Subbed about 5mins in. The way you summarise these are incredible - thanks

  • @swamigrazgraziano3551
    @swamigrazgraziano3551 2 месяца назад

    This was my third Pete judo video and they all hit 3 for 3 on content!!! Great stuff Pete- keep it coming.

  • @NixonR-ek6eq
    @NixonR-ek6eq Год назад +8

    Great video man. I just found your channel through reddit, I really like smaller channels like this, Digital marketers wet dream I must say. Keep up the great work!

    • @PeteJudo1
      @PeteJudo1  Год назад

      Thanks Nixon! Appreciate the support!

  • @rolf7135
    @rolf7135 Год назад +2

    Thanks for a good suggesting. I read Think Again when it came, and like it very much. The Elephant in our Brain and Lessons about the Brain is on my readinglist (have read the others 🙂)

  • @sdaiwepm
    @sdaiwepm 11 месяцев назад +15

    Can you still recommend a book by Dan at this point?!

  • @gerardofigueroa6077
    @gerardofigueroa6077 Год назад +1

    Thank you, Pete! I want to read them all!

  • @darogadibia1442
    @darogadibia1442 Год назад +16

    Amazing recommendations. I’ve been looking for recommendations on psychological books, and this is just what I needed. I truly appreciate.

    • @PeteJudo1
      @PeteJudo1  Год назад

      Glad it was useful!

    • @joshuabaker67
      @joshuabaker67 11 месяцев назад

      Truth Vs Falsehood by David Hawkins is by far the most interesting book I’ve ever read, weather you believe in his perspectives or not.

  • @nickmichelioudakis4300
    @nickmichelioudakis4300 Год назад +3

    Hi Pete. I've just discovered your channel. I too am v v interested in Behavioural Economics and I have read all the book you recommend here. I would like to take the opportunity to recommend a few more (apologies if you know them already).
    • ‘Why Everyone (else!) is a Hypocrite’ (Robert Kurzban). This is similar to ‘The Elephant in the Brain’. A true eye-opener!
    • ‘Inside the Nudge Unit’ (David Halpern). Practical applications of insights from Behavioural Economics in the UK.
    • ‘Messengers’ (Martin & Marks). This looks at eight key factors which make messages more or less persuasive.
    I could recommend more, but I wouldn’t like to make this message too long. Keep up the good work! 😊

  • @MimouFirst
    @MimouFirst Год назад +5

    I would love it if you would post your whole books list of books that you think are good reads.
    I've got about 40 books on the topic in my bookcase and I would love to see if there are gems I'm still missing :)
    I got two already that appear in this video and one on my wish list. So I'll check out the other two; talking to strangers and lessons about the brain.

  • @frankthetank130
    @frankthetank130 11 месяцев назад +1

    Given the other content on your channel, what is the external validity and replicability of this research?

  • @cristinarmo3303
    @cristinarmo3303 Год назад +1

    Ahhh thank you! Im building up my collection at the moment

  • @helloDobson3259
    @helloDobson3259 Год назад +2

    Based on my life's experiences, the Elephant in the Brain seems on the mark with everything stated. I'm going to read that one - thanks. I too have found Lisa Feldman Barrett's work really insightful, fascinating.

  • @corrupt1238
    @corrupt1238 11 месяцев назад

    Enjoyed your vid, liked & subbed

  • @AdamLandau
    @AdamLandau Год назад +1

    Hi Pete,
    I wanted to write a comment about the 'switching answer' phenomenon. To me, I think you would need a much higher sample size to come to a causal conclusion on this topic. Did the papers you talked about provide any insight as to why this was the case that there is a higher likelihood of being right?

    • @PeteJudo1
      @PeteJudo1  Год назад +1

      In Adam Grants book, he basically argues that thinking longer generally gives your brain more opportunity to come to better conclusions as you consider the intricacies of the decision.
      What the papers argues specifically I can’t remember. You’ll have to read them yourself

  • @user-ls6ql2ne2s
    @user-ls6ql2ne2s 11 месяцев назад

    Gotta recommend this channel to my friends

  • @GabrielePalma
    @GabrielePalma 11 месяцев назад +3

    Am I mistaken or Dan Ariely, the first author, has also gone down with Francesca Gino scandal?

    • @bonicheque6127
      @bonicheque6127 11 месяцев назад

      He no longer recommends The honest truth about dishonesty in his recent video regarding Francesca Gino.

  • @oh_rhythm
    @oh_rhythm 4 месяца назад

    That elephant one seriously should make distinctions between types of people.

  • @alexh2292
    @alexh2292 Год назад +1

    Oh great, more books to add to my reading list....ha ha only joking. Lessons about the brain sounds really intriguing, I'll probably check it out after I finish Predictably Irrational. Thanks for the recommendations 👍

  • @Notabot437
    @Notabot437 Год назад +3

    What's wrong with thinking fats and slow?

  • @simplesteplearning889
    @simplesteplearning889 11 месяцев назад +2

    I enjoy your videos and I'm a subscriber. So I have a question that's been on my mind for many years...'
    In your synopsis of "The Elephant in the Brain," you said, "We tend to act first and then justify to ourselves later why we just did the thing we just did." My question would be, "Is that true of everyone to the same extent? (Seems unlikely) Or exactly who is that more true of, and who is it less true of, and what do those people know or do that the rest of us don't."
    I ran across this same type of question years ago when reading Martin Seligman's book "What You Can Change, and What You Can't." He stated a statistic that 96% of people who lose a significant amount of weight end up gaining it back within 4 years. My question was, "OK, so what are those 4% doing that the rest of us aren't, and is that teachable?"
    Same thing with statements like, "Most people who take piano lessons as children can't play the piano as adults." Again, perhaps true - but some do end up learning how to play. So how - as a parent, student, or teacher - can I facilitate that result?
    This isn't an idle question. I'm a math educator, and I'm well aware that most adults don't remember much of the math they learned in school - but they sure do remember that they hated it!
    So my question isn't so much, "What's true?" (as in the analogous observation that "Gravity exists"), but rather, "What's possible?" (as in, "How do we design elevators, planes, and rockets to account for and counter that gravity?")

    • @drewt9829
      @drewt9829 11 месяцев назад

      Great question. I hope it doesn’t get ignored.

    • @simplesteplearning889
      @simplesteplearning889 11 месяцев назад

      @@drewt9829 Thanks so much, me too!

  • @samtan4729
    @samtan4729 11 месяцев назад

    Part 2 please!

  • @Jess-nh7cx
    @Jess-nh7cx Год назад

    Hi Pete, I've recently come across your channel and thanks a lot for these useful contents. I'm currently considering about taking Masters in this field but also having a bit of second thoughts whether I actually need it. I would love to hear your experience studying Masters in behavioral science and how it helps you with you career. Thanks a lot.

    • @PeteJudo1
      @PeteJudo1  Год назад

      Will make a video on this soon!

    • @Jess-nh7cx
      @Jess-nh7cx Год назад

      ​@@PeteJudo1 Thank you! Looking forward to it.

  • @danielcappell
    @danielcappell 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm struck by how often findings in behavioral science studies are interpreted in implausible ways. for instance, the idea that post hoc rationalization is all about saving face seems to me to be wildly implausible. the brain has many more functions than just trying to save face among ones peers, and if post hoc rationalization is really as pervasive as the studies make it seem, it's implausible that "saving face" or "ego protection" could explain it. a much more plausible explanation is that it's about aligning ones beliefs. there are theories which imply that conscious thoughts get redistributed to subconscious processes, the global workspace model of consciousness being a big one. the function of Post hoc rationalizations, under such a theory, could be to send signals to subconscious processes to continue to produce recommendations to consciousness that align with the newly assented-to rationalization. rationalization. The effect over time would be a psychological system that has more beliefs aligned with each other into a coherent whole, and is more principled in it's actions and beliefs. so under this hypothesis post hoc rationalization would be a highly rational process, not the irrational. it's a forward facing process, rather than a purely backward facing process. behavioral scientists tend to interpret their findings in a way that implies that people are irrational... there's something very oedipal about them in this regard, i must say. behavioral scientists are trying to always rebel against the old economics, which haf a highly rationalistic view of human nature, that preceeded them

  • @spencerantoniomarlen-starr3069
    @spencerantoniomarlen-starr3069 11 месяцев назад

    You should really consider reading two landmark economics papers. One of them is from 1950 called "Uncertainty, Evolution, and Economic Theory" by Armen Alchian, and the other is called "Irrational Behavior and Economic Theory" by Gary Becker. Taken together, and the latter was inspired directly by the former, they effectively prebunk behavioral economics my friend. And these are obviously not two lightweight economists, one was a nobel prize winner and the other had one of the top 20 articles in the American Economic Review in the 20th century!

  • @himalayaherb
    @himalayaherb Год назад

    very nice book pete

  • @deisebrsoares
    @deisebrsoares Год назад

    Oh nice

  • @manuelgongora283
    @manuelgongora283 Год назад +2

    I'm just a beginner here. Whats the problem with TF&S, the book that should not be named?
    I was just about to start reading it.

    • @PeteJudo1
      @PeteJudo1  Год назад

      I have 2 videos on this! Go filter my videos by popularity and you’ll find it pretty quick!

    • @4061earthabcdesong
      @4061earthabcdesong 11 месяцев назад +1

      I think we'll still read TFnS

  • @stoneself
    @stoneself 11 месяцев назад +5

    Do you still recommend Ariely's book given the fraud charges?

  • @joinedupjon
    @joinedupjon 11 месяцев назад +2

    serial bestseller author Gladwell hardly seems like a hidden gem.

  • @j2248
    @j2248 Год назад +1

    Hi Pete, I am hoping to forge a career in behavioral economics but I am not very good at coding (R, Python, etc.), is such a career achievable without these skills?

    • @PeteJudo1
      @PeteJudo1  Год назад +2

      It is! Though you will have to apply for non-technical positions only. Many positions in consulting don’t require these skills. Some positions offer to train you in it if you’re willing

  • @psikeyhackr6914
    @psikeyhackr6914 8 месяцев назад

    What has happened to the depreciation of durable consumer since Sputnik? The Net Domestic Product equation only subtracts the depreciation of Capital Goods like industrial robots and 18-wheel trucks. All of the cars that American consumers have trashed have been ignored.
    The Laws of Physics do not care about economics or people so how does planned obsolescence fit into this? Is the entire economics profession dishonest.
    A book about planned obsolescence and the Depression just turned up in Project Gutenberg.

  • @jeetdhindsa
    @jeetdhindsa 9 месяцев назад +1

    Why cab't you name thinking fast and slow?

    • @alexsvoboda4994
      @alexsvoboda4994 4 месяца назад

      I want to know too. Awesome book - though I think the book talks about priming which has been part of reproducibility crisis

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc 6 месяцев назад

    5:58 😂😂😂😂😂😂 they dont know me then

  • @googleyoutubechannel8554
    @googleyoutubechannel8554 11 месяцев назад

    If 'The Elephant in the Room' is correct, doesn't it invalidate the core concepts of not only traditional 'rational' economics theory, but also _any_ behaviorist paper (most of them) based on survey data?

    • @golfboy69
      @golfboy69 9 месяцев назад

      Your "if" is the key. And Elephant feels iffy in the extreme

  • @c.b.4270
    @c.b.4270 11 месяцев назад

    To the answer " Do i Look fat in that dress? "The correct answer is : "Compare to what?" 😊

  • @cougar2013
    @cougar2013 10 месяцев назад

    These things all seem like obvious common sense. I love your content, so I’m not ragging on you. Just saying I don’t understand what information can fill so many pages in a book. Is it some kind of groundbreaking realization that people are selfish and irrational?

  • @superdeluxesmell
    @superdeluxesmell 11 месяцев назад

    I call these kind of popular books by academics midwit factories. They’re pretty much always just filled with common sense, common knowledge and half truths dressed up as something deeper to make people who aren’t terribly clever feel like they are. Like, no offense, but everything you said in this video would already be well known to a relatively well educated, intelligent adolescent.

  • @yw1971
    @yw1971 10 месяцев назад +1

    Gladwell's 'Outliers' & 'Blink' are MUCH better & thought provoking.

  • @leonardocordeiro4714
    @leonardocordeiro4714 Год назад +2

    Video didn't age well. It's about your first recommendation. I really liked this one: Opening Skinner's Box: Great Psychological Experiments for the Twentieth Century.

  • @alonsolce
    @alonsolce 10 месяцев назад

    great video. the last book sounds dumb though

  • @anne-katherine1169
    @anne-katherine1169 4 месяца назад

    "Emotions are an example of irrationality"? omg why why why this title

  • @user-to2gh7sg3l
    @user-to2gh7sg3l 23 дня назад

    Not sure what behavioral Economics are but you might be mistaking polished turds for gems.

  • @kdhd100
    @kdhd100 3 месяца назад +1

    Behavioural sciences is the most boring subject or degree ever..... How people manage it is surprising.... But you can read the book called Behave, it is good..... Or Outliers by Gladwell.....

  • @gretalaube91
    @gretalaube91 9 месяцев назад +4

    Elephant in the Brain: Evolutionary rationale only works when you are young and procreating, I'm old and DONE procreating. I must have no reason, then..... maybe the author should ask someone else other than sophomore college students.

  • @tylermarshall5350
    @tylermarshall5350 6 месяцев назад

    Talking to strangers was a complete waste of time.

  • @doronski64
    @doronski64 Год назад +2

    So how does the evolutionary psychology rationalisation explain the behaviour of people who are happily monogamous or gay people, who are not reasonably motivated by reproduction? Seems like a shallow argument.

  • @l.d.m.33
    @l.d.m.33 4 месяца назад

    Wait, let me get this straight, you're recommending Ariely's book about honesty when he's engaged (allegedley) in data fraud? Surely, you should give at least some attention to these accusations.