Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts

Friday, January 12, 2024

My Amazon Review of David Brooks' "How to Know a Person"

 The Art of Human Connection


After reading New York Times columnist David Brooks’ book, I got the sense he must have spent thousands of hours in therapy trying to understand himself and his relationships with those close to him. In writing this book Brooks talked to many psychologists, psychiatrists and neuroscientists searching to understand how deep human connections are made. Further he reinforces the science with a host of very human anecdotes.


To Brooks there are two broad types of people. “Diminishers” who are self-centered who don’t disclose much about themselves and don’t really want to know about the people they meet. Their polar opposite is a much smaller group of people who Brooks calls “Illuminators.” Those people are willing to open up their lives to other people and are truly interested in the people they meet. These folks are the story-telling animals that my friend and colleague Ed Leamer writes about. According to Leamer, humans are story-telling animals, but somehow in today’s fast paced society we don’t slow down enough to tell and more importantly to listen. As the old adage goes, you can learn more by listening than speaking.


The goal is to avoid making ourselves invisible to others while at the same time removing the invisibility from them. The sub-head to the book’s title is “The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen” is the message of the book.


Brooks doesn’t talk much of himself until the very end of the book. My sense is that he should have started with his own personal issues in the beginning. To quote Polonius in Shakespeare’s “Hamlet,” “This above all: to thine own self be true.” To me in order to be seen deeply you have see yourself deeply as well.


Brooks has written an important book on how we can get along better with our neighbors, colleagues, and yes, strangers. That in turn will make it easier to heal the divisions in our society.

For the full Amazon URL see: The Art of Human Connection (amazon.com)

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

My Amazon Review of Michael Lewis' "The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds"

How Two Israeli Psychologists Changed Economics

In March 1979 two Israeli psychologists published an article entitled “Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under Risk” in Econometrica, one of the most prestigious economics journals. That widely cited article established the underpinnings of what became to be known as behavioral economics. Bestselling author Michael Lewis lovingly tells the story of the decades long friendship and intellectual collaboration between Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. Kahneman would go on to win the Noble Prize in economics in 2002 for their joint work; Tversky being ineligible because he died prematurely in 1996 of cancer.

Lewis is at his best when he discusses their distinct personalities. Kahneman is an introvert and a pessimist. Tversky, on the other hand, is an extrovert and optimist, yet they work together. They also go to war together in 1967 and 1973 to defend the Israeli state. In fact it is their experience in Israeli society in both peace and war enable them to see the world more clearly. They did not live as all too many American academics in cloistered cocoons. They are of the world and see the world as it is and not as theory says it should be.

What Khaneman and Tversky do is to convincingly demonstrate that human beings do not always act as rational economic agents as economic theory would suggest and that individual errors do not necessarily cancel out. They suggest that all too many times individuals underestimate uncertainty by using short form rules of thumb, heuristics in their words. Kahneman would later write a bestseller entitled “Thinking, Fast and Slow” based on this premise. In contrast people sometimes overweight low probability events. It is for this reason the same person might by an insurance policy and a lottery ticket on the same day by over-estimating the likelihood of both winning the lottery and their house burning down. Remember the expected value of both the lottery ticket and the insurance policy is negative.


Lewis opens his book by discussing how Daryl Morey, the general manager of the Houston Rockets basketball team uses the principles of behavioral economics in selecting players. This is an obvious follow on from his bestselling book “Moneyball” on the role of data in baseball. Only after writing that book did Lewis realize that what he was really writing about was the work of Khaneman and Tversky making it the genesis of this book. Lewis goes on to discuss, in a very real and personal way, the role of behavioral economics in medicine and government. I know I haven’t done justice to the emotional interplay between Tversky and Khaneman and their families that makes the book more than a history of their work. I will leave that to the reader. “The Undoing Project:….” is well worth the read and I highly recommend it.