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These findings add to the growing evidence that good mood, intuition, creativity, gullibility, and increased reliance on System 1 form a cluster. At the other pole, sadness, vigilance, suspicion, an analytic approach, and increased effort also go together.
Daniel Kahneman • Thinking, Fast and Slow
Choking is merely a vivid example of the havoc that can be caused by too much thought. It's an illustration of rationality gone awry, of what happens when we rely on the wrong brain areas. For opera singers and golf players, such deliberate thought processes interfere with the trained movements of their muscles, so that their own bodies betray them
... See moreJonah Lehrer • How We Decide
AI - context and theory
Reading around how AI works in GENERAL, how it’s being applied at an industry and behavioural level
Oliver Wapshott • 1 card
Allen and Sandow’s view of social systems was influenced by the Chilean biologist Humberto Maturana, who is famous for his pioneering studies of cognition in living systems. Maturana says that intelligent action is created in social systems where all the members of a network accept the others as legitimate participants in the network.
Peter M. Senge • The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of The Learning Organization
To this day, no single scientific study has succeeded in distinguishing between what is mentally normal and abnormal without using social criteria.
Paul Verhaeghe • What About Me?: The Struggle for Identity in a Market-Based Society
What’s Wrong With the Rorschach?, written with M. Teresa Nezworski, Scott Lilienfeld, and Howard Garb and released in 2003.
Annie Murphy Paul • The Cult of Personality Testing: How Personality Tests Are Leading Us to Miseducate Our Children, Mismanage Our Companies, and Misunderstand Ourselves
Emotional Intelligence
PM • 2 cards
In the 1950s, an American psychoanalytic therapist severed his Freudian roots and turned to the Stoics to form a radically new form of therapy. Rather than plumbing the depths of the content of a problem and exploring how a stumbling block might relate to, say, one’s early psychosexual development, Albert Ellis argued that we should look at whateve
... See moreDerren Brown • Happy: Why More or Less Everything is Absolutely Fine
Berne described ego states as coherent ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving that occur together.