Search

Results for “Daniel Kahneman”

8 interviews · 14 quotes

Conversations

Interviews

All Interviews

Dr. Laurie Santos on Happiness & Human Cognition

In this interview I speak to Dr. Laurie Santos, one of the world’s foremost experts on happiness and human cognition. Laurie is the Chandrika and Ranjan Tandon Professor of Psychology and Head…

13 min read

From the archive

Quotes

Each person is trapped in their own world and assume that the rest of humanity sees the world the same way that they do. That assumption is incorrect. You see the world differently to me, and that's true for every situation in which we find ourselves. It's a side-effect of how we're built!

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

The easiest way to understand noise is by thinking about measurements. Suppose you are measuring a line with a very fine ruler. You will expect some variability such that you will not get the same number every time when you measure. That variability is noise. In the mathematics of accuracy, the expression for total error is very simple and quite compelling. It is bias-squared plus noise-squared. Bias and noise are both contributing to error and in that equation, they do so on the same basis.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

If you want to understand the mainsprings of human-action, then understanding the remembering self is more important than the experiencing self.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

There is then a second order overconfidence where someone recognises a bubble but feels they will escape it when other people don't.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

There is a proverb in Hebrew that says that there used to be prophecy, but prophecy is now left for fools. I am not enthusiastic about forecasting anything.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

Many entrepreneurs are deluded about their odds of success, that evidence is very clear. This creates problems… Should a government subsidise entrepreneurs who greatly over-estimate their chances of success?

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

I have argued, along with Nassim Taleb, that one of the sources of overconfidence in our ability to forecast the future is the great ease with which we find explanations for the past. That's a very significant mechanism that produces overconfidence.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

You cannot understand entrepreneurial activity without understanding optimism. Research has shown that optimism and overconfidence in individuals is directly linked to their engagement in entrepreneurial activity.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

There is a naïve form which doesn't recognise the bubble, and thinks that real-estate will go up forever. There is then a second order overconfidence where someone recognises a bubble but feels they will escape it when other people don't.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

Many entrepreneurs are deluded about their odds of success, that evidence is very clear. This creates problems… Should a government subsidise entrepreneurs who greatly over-estimate their chances of success?

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

One of the sources of overconfidence in our ability to forecast the future is the great ease with which we find explanations for the past. That's a very significant mechanism that produces overconfidence.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

You cannot understand entrepreneurial activity without understanding optimism. Research has shown that optimism and overconfidence in individuals is directly linked to their engagement in entrepreneurial activity.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

Each person is trapped in their own world and assume that the rest of humanity sees the world the same way that they do. That assumption is incorrect. You see the world differently to me, and that's true for every situation in which we find ourselves.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research

The easiest way to understand noise is by thinking about measurements. The variability of the error is noise – and that's important. In the mathematics of accuracy, the expression for total error is very simple and quite compelling. It is bias-squared plus noise-squared.

— Daniel Kahneman

Nobel Prize Winner in Economics for Behavioral Economics Research