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The Art of Thinking Clearly

The Art of Thinking Clearly

Rolf Dobelli

Work, Behaviour & Decision-Making

Status: Read

Where I got it?

Probably at a bookstore. I’ve had this book for a very long time. It’s pages are yellowed and stained from use.

Why I picked it up?

I don’t remember.

When I read it?

This is one of those books I keep coming back to. Whenever I feel like, I need a brain reset, I pick up this book and skip to relevant chapters.

Main topic...

How cognitive biases distort judgement and decision-making in everyday life. The book looks at common thinking errors, mental shortcuts, and situations where people believe they are being rational but are not.

Key ideas...

  • Humans do not make decisions objectively.
  • We often rely on shortcuts, stories, emotions, and incomplete information.
  • Confidence is not the same as correctness.
  • Simplicity can improve thinking.
  • Small biases accumulate into larger mistakes.

Examples covered include:

  • confirmation bias
  • survivorship bias
  • social proof
  • overconfidence
  • availability bias

What I learned?

This book made me pay more attention to how decisions are made rather than only whether the final answer is right. I found myself thinking about:

  • where assumptions come from
  • what information is missing
  • whether patterns are real or only appear meaningful
  • how confidence can hide weak reasoning

Small note...

I’ve lent this book to two friends, I’m surprised it even made its way back to me. That’s how long I have had this book.

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