
raptitude.com
Key takeaways from Why Do We Want Problems to Be Someone’s Fault?
The mind demands a perpetrator for every problem -- and not because there is one.
This your link? Claim it
More like this
Big Think
Theory of mind: What chess and drug dealers can teach you about manipulation
Big Think
3 min read · Jun 3rd · From grandmasters to drug dealers, people who make deft use of "theory of mind" can remain several steps ahead of their rivals.
Reader View · Shared by 778, including Marsha Collier, Howard Getson, Dr. Marigo Raftopoulos
Farnam Street
Thought Experiment: How Einstein Solved Difficult Problems
Farnam Street
9 min read · Feb 25th · Read this and learn how the mental model of thought experiment, helped people like Albert Einstein, Zeno, and Galileo solve difficult problems.
Reader View · Shared by 1183, including Jason Lauritsen, Jessel Sookha
Ness Labs
Navigating the mind: 40 major fields of psychology and neuroscience
Ness Labs
~17 min read · 2021-02-05 · Psychology and neuroscience are such rapidly growing fields of research, it’s easy to get confused. If you’ve sometimes been scratching your head trying to figure out who does what, this guide is for…
Reader View · Shared by 372, including Anne-Laure Le Cunff, Oscar MacDonald, Filippo Antonio Capizzi, Gabriele, Luminous Kaleidoscope, Bryan Onel, Kamil Ali Kamil
Ness Labs
The psychology of negative thinking
Ness Labs
4 min read · Apr 29th · When negative thinking becomes the norm, it can contribute to mental health problems including social anxiety, low self-esteem, and even depression. To avoid falling into that pattern, let’s explore…
Reader View · Shared by 2361, including Massimiliano Aroffo, Tamsen Webster, Message Strategist (she/her)
Lifehack
10 Simple Ways To Refocus a Wandering Mind
Lifehack
10 min read · 2021-04-13 · Do you want to reach your goals and avoid distractions? Here are 10 simple ways to refocus your wandering mind and achieve success.
Reader View · Shared by 1096, including Vincenzo Tremonte, Kyle Bunch, Katja Evertz, Memen Isimo, Josh Blaha, Neil Hart 💙, Swebliss, Tauno
Farnam Street
Understanding your Circle of Competence: How Warren Buffett Avoids Problems
Farnam Street
3 min read · 2021-12-20 · Understanding your circle of competence allows you avoid problems. As we can learn from Warren Buffett, avoiding problems is easier than solving them.
Reader View · Shared by 727, including George Waititu
The Guardian
Beat the clock: the surprising psychology behind being perpetually late
The Guardian
2 min read · From 2020 · There are as many reasons for unpunctuality as there are habitually tardy people – and the underlying reasons can be complex
Reader View · Shared by 292, including Katja Evertz, Miguel Angel Escotet, Anthony Hamelle, Jo Hemmings 🇺🇦, Jonathan Kogan, Tauno, rohit, Tom Connor, Warren Whitlock, Martin Jones
The New Yorker
Why Facts Don’t Change Our Minds
The New Yorker
~12 min read · From 2017 · New discoveries about the human mind show the limitations of reason.
Summary · Reader View · Shared by 1261, including Shelley Bonanno, MA, LLP (she/her), Susan K. Whitbourne, Jeff Atwood, Brian Laung Aoaeh, CFA, Braden Kelley, Mark Kaigwa, Anita Leirfall, Mathew Ingram, 💥 Katie Martell, Jason Silva, Stowe Boyd, Christina Farr, Liliane Ferrari ™, Moritz Meenen, Howard Getson, Thomas Power, Matthias Sala, David Papandrew, Nir Eyal, Jane
Farnam Street
The Psychology of Human Misjudgment, by Charlie Munger
Farnam Street
From 2020 · The Psychology of Human Misjudgment, a speech given in 1995 by legendary investor Charlie Munger, opened my eyes to how behavioral psychology can be applied to business and problem-solving. Munger,…
Reader View · Shared by 724, including Liv 😷, Jose Paul Martin, Josh Wolfe, Marvin “Polymath but really Just Generalist” Liao, Chintan Shah, Gabrielle Mendoza, 瑞拿頭, Vikram Dutt, Jason Zweig, Tauno, StanChan, Ayala Sherbow, Rifki Caesar Novaldin, davidabrock, Ceferino Díaz, Fern, Carly