BookShared
  • MEMBER AREA    
  • The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds

    (By Michael Lewis)

    Book Cover Watermark PDF Icon Read Ebook
    ×
    Size 26 MB (26,085 KB)
    Format PDF
    Downloaded 654 times
    Last checked 13 Hour ago!
    Author Michael Lewis
    “Book Descriptions: “Brilliant. . . . Lewis has given us a spectacular account of two great men who faced up to uncertainty and the limits of human reason.” ―William Easterly, Wall Street Journal

    Forty years ago, Israeli psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky wrote a series of breathtakingly original papers that invented the field of behavioral economics. One of the greatest partnerships in the history of science, Kahneman and Tversky’s extraordinary friendship incited a revolution in Big Data studies, advanced evidence-based medicine, led to a new approach to government regulation, and made much of Michael Lewis’s own work possible. In The Undoing Project, Lewis shows how their Nobel Prize–winning theory of the mind altered our perception of reality.”

    Google Drive Logo DRIVE
    Book 1

    Thinking, Fast and Slow

    ★★★★★

    Daniel Kahneman

    Book 1

    Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and the Rise of Social Engineering

    ★★★★★

    Malcolm Gladwell

    Book 1

    Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment

    ★★★★★

    Daniel Kahneman

    Book 1

    Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics

    ★★★★★

    Richard H. Thaler

    Book 1

    The Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail—But Some Don't

    ★★★★★

    Nate Silver

    Book 1

    The Man Who Solved the Market: How Jim Simons Launched the Quant Revolution

    ★★★★★

    Gregory Zuckerman

    Book 1

    Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI

    ★★★★★

    Yuval Noah Harari

    Book 1

    Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

    ★★★★★

    David Epstein

    Book 1

    The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable

    ★★★★★

    Nassim Nicholas Taleb