THE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER‘A monumental, gripping book … Outstanding’ SUNDAY TIMES‘Noise may be the most important book I've read in more than a decade. A genuinely new idea so exceedingly important you will immediately put it into practice. A masterpiece’
Angela Duckworth, author of Grit
‘An absolutely brilliant investigation of a massive societal problem that has been hiding in plain sight’
Steven Levitt, co-author of Freakonomics
From the world-leaders in strategic thinking and the multi-million copy bestselling authors of Thinking Fast and Slow and Nudge, the next big book to change the way you think.
We like to think we make decisions based on good reasoning – and that our doctors, judges, politicians, economic forecasters and employers do too. In this groundbreaking book, three world-leading behavioural scientists come together to assess the last great fault in our collective decision-making: noise.
We all make bad judgements more than we think. Noise shows us what we can do to make better ones.
Reviews are written only by people that have an active subscription and have rated the book.
Erittäin mielenkiintoinen ja merkittäväkin kirja. Välillä ajatuksenkulun koukeroita ei kyllä tahtonut jaksaa seurata. Tekoälystä huolestuneille tämä kirja on pakollinen.
Jari
★
5
Book
★
5
Narration
The concept is so simple to understand, yet solution so hard to implement. We need to fight against our inner decision demons to make this World a better place. Brilliant and yet easy to understand writing. The narrator also deserved a big shout-out. Highly recommended!
Ali
★
5
Book
★
5
Narration
Kattava kirja päätöksenteon kohinasta ja siitä, miten sitä voi vähentää.
Kirjassa on hitaasti etenevä kerronta ja runsaasti toistoa, ilmeisesti tehty jenkkiyleisölle.
Odotin parempaa, tosin valitsin kirjan pelkästään Kahnemanin perusteella
Oskari
★
2
Book
★
4
Narration
Disappointing
I’m a fan of Kahneman but this book is disappointing. Apparently people reach different decisions from identical information because of subjective values and idiosyncratic differences. Amazing. Who knew.