
Thinking, Fast and Slow — the Gist
Your brain runs two operating systems — one fast and confident, one slow and careful — and the fast one is quietly making most of your decisions. Kahneman spent fifty years catching it in the act.
What you'll walk away with
- System 1 and System 2. The fast, intuitive autopilot versus the slow, effortful reasoner — and why the autopilot usually wins.
- The bias catalogue. Anchoring, loss aversion, overconfidence: the predictable ways smart people get it wrong.
- Catching biases live. The situations where you should distrust your gut and deliberately slow down.
- The two selves. Why the experiencing self and the remembering self disagree about what made you happy.
Who this is for
- Anyone who makes decisions with money, people, or risk on the line
- People who've overpaid for something and still aren't sure why
- Curious minds who want the science, not the pop-psych version
About the author
Daniel Kahneman was an Israeli-American psychologist who won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2002 for research on judgment and decision-making, much of it done with his longtime collaborator Amos Tversky. Thinking, Fast and Slow, published in 2011, distilled five decades of that work. He died in March 2024.
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- 19 minutes — short enough to finish in one sitting
- Audio-first — absorb it while moving, not sitting still
- One-page cheat sheet — the key idea, without re-reading
- No forced pace — pause, rewind, replay at any speed
- 30-day refund if it didn't help — no questions asked



