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Já se sabe, não é de hoje, que a tão incensada racionalidade humana é falha e todos os indivíduos são passíveis de erros de avaliação e escolhas equivocadas. Best-seller internacional, traduzido para 30 idiomas, com mais de 500 mil exemplares vendidos na Alemanha, A arte de pensar claramente – do fundador do Zürich Minds e ex-diretor do grupo Swissair, Rolf Dobelli – reú...more
Published June 19th 2013 by Objetiva (first published January 1st 2011)
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The WandererI agree with you entirely. It had a lot of great content, but the author comes across as a bit arrogant. I wonder if that's partly due to translation,…moreI agree with you entirely. It had a lot of great content, but the author comes across as a bit arrogant. I wonder if that's partly due to translation, or whether he sounds like that in the original, too.(less)
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May 23, 2013Bob rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Nice packaging and design may give this book an aura of credibility. They certainly worked; I skimmed a few pages of it and bought it, thinking I would learn important lessons that I wouldn't get from other books about critical thinking. Alas, that won't be the case since the book reads like bull in a china shop; Dobelli massacres the art of critical thinking and puts in its place a Frankenstein doppelganger called cynicism and uncritical use of anecdotes.
Let's take for example: Lesson# 19 'The...more
Let's take for example: Lesson# 19 'The...more
Jun 28, 2013Kevin rated it really liked it · review of another edition
If you had lots of time (and interest in becoming aware of your cognitive biases), you should read Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman, Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely, everything by Steven Pinker, Fooled by Randomness and The Black Swan by Nassim Taleb, and others. But since not everyone has the time and interest, instead read The Art of Thinking Clearly. This book has 99 short chapters (all of them are almost exactly 2.5 pages) that cover the major hiccups in our thinking process. A...more
Sep 29, 2013Thomas Harris rated it did not like it · review of another edition
PLAGARISM.
It can be useful as a starting point for a list of cognitive biases. However, it is mere plagarism of other texts.
Dobelli uses examples taken directly from other sources, changes the names of characters and wording slightly, and uses them as if they were his own. Why not just quote from the original text?
Also, some of his examples are so diluted and simplified that they are actually WRONG. One of the most glaring ones is his water treatment example for 'Neglect of Probability'. A: redu...more
It can be useful as a starting point for a list of cognitive biases. However, it is mere plagarism of other texts.
Dobelli uses examples taken directly from other sources, changes the names of characters and wording slightly, and uses them as if they were his own. Why not just quote from the original text?
Also, some of his examples are so diluted and simplified that they are actually WRONG. One of the most glaring ones is his water treatment example for 'Neglect of Probability'. A: redu...more
Mar 16, 2014Manoj Arora rated it really liked it · review of another edition
My learning from the book:
(1) Never underestimate the hard work and lower probability of success, just because we are shown more successful people than many more actual failures
(2) Confirmation bias is the mother of all misconceptions. It is a tendency to interpret new information so that it becomes compatible with our existing theories. Warren Buffet has seen people losing money with this because they ignore facts which contradict the theory in the mind of the investor. Dis confirming evidence...more
Apr 13, 2014Ben Babcock rated it did not like it · review of another edition(1) Never underestimate the hard work and lower probability of success, just because we are shown more successful people than many more actual failures
(2) Confirmation bias is the mother of all misconceptions. It is a tendency to interpret new information so that it becomes compatible with our existing theories. Warren Buffet has seen people losing money with this because they ignore facts which contradict the theory in the mind of the investor. Dis confirming evidence...more
Shelves: essays, non-fiction, owned, 2014-read, economics, science
This book is the dead tree equivalent of a BuzzFeed post. Its title could be “I Got 99 Cognitive Biases But a Psychology Degree Ain’t One.” Or maybe not.
Rolf Dobelli enumerates 99 thinking errors, or cognitive biases, in The Art of Thinking Clearly, dispensing as he does tips for leading a more rational, less error-prone life. Anyone who has done even the least amount of reading in this subject will recognize many of the cognitive biases that Dobelli describes here. Unlike most popular cognitive...more
Jun 02, 2018Iman ShabaniRolf Dobelli enumerates 99 thinking errors, or cognitive biases, in The Art of Thinking Clearly, dispensing as he does tips for leading a more rational, less error-prone life. Anyone who has done even the least amount of reading in this subject will recognize many of the cognitive biases that Dobelli describes here. Unlike most popular cognitive...more
rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Shelves: non-fiction, self-development, read-in-2018, worth-only-one-read
If you're looking for a book to help you get ahead, or improve you as a human being, don't look here; but if like me, you want to see how a book of such reputation with no scientific ground, or even much common sense, can be so popular among some people, get this book and start reading.
(I tried not to include any spoilers, so read with peace of mind if you have it in your to-read list.)
The fact that this is a terrible book became known to me very early in the book, however I decided to keep read...more
(I tried not to include any spoilers, so read with peace of mind if you have it in your to-read list.)
The fact that this is a terrible book became known to me very early in the book, however I decided to keep read...more
Jun 14, 2014Pooja Kashyap rated it it was ok · review of another edition
I bought this book just because I saw Taleb eulogizing the book right on the book cover and so I fell for it. If you have read The Black Swan, The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb then I would strongly re-commend do NOT go for the book but if you haven’t dipped into the ocean of Taleb’s thoughts then this book is for you. More or less, The Art of Thinking Clearly harps on the same line of thoughts, as is the case with Black Swan. Each chapter in the former case is like bu...more
Mar 28, 2013Blue rated it it was ok · review of another edition
FYI: I won this book from goodreads Giveaways, but that in no way influenced my review.
The Art of Thinking Clearly presents a bunch of anecdotal evidence to support commonly known fallacies in logical thinking. You know that hindsight is 20/20, we cling to our narratives, and think we'll be like the models in makeup ads if only we buy their product, plus a bunch of other semi-obvious ways in which we end up making bad decisions (or poorly rationalized flukes that still turn out okay). This book...more
The Art of Thinking Clearly presents a bunch of anecdotal evidence to support commonly known fallacies in logical thinking. You know that hindsight is 20/20, we cling to our narratives, and think we'll be like the models in makeup ads if only we buy their product, plus a bunch of other semi-obvious ways in which we end up making bad decisions (or poorly rationalized flukes that still turn out okay). This book...more
May 22, 2014Daniela rated it it was ok · review of another edition
It's a PLAGIARIZED anthology of cognitive errors. The biases it presents are, mostly, well summarized from a series of books from Taleb, Ariely, Kahneman and others(which, as shown by Taleb in the link, Dobelli used without permission). The author made no research on any of the items, but merely put forward the work of others. He does say so in the beginning, that his book comprises of research from other people, but it doesn't absolve him of copying.
Other than that, I consider it a good mix of...more
Other than that, I consider it a good mix of...more
Sep 08, 2014Zhiyar Qadri rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Absolutely In love with this books, I fulfils its title. A good way of reading it would be highlighting the clearest example in each fallacy in addition to the conclusion. I would say at the end sit down with a pen and paper and try to apply each to your life to consolidate the learning, make a list of all and in important decisions make sure they are error free.
A passage from the epilogue
'Even highly intelligent people fall to the same cognitive traps. Likewise, errors are not randomly distri...more
A passage from the epilogue
'Even highly intelligent people fall to the same cognitive traps. Likewise, errors are not randomly distri...more
Jun 04, 2017Ali Sattari rated it liked it · review of another edition
Good wrap-up on cognitive errors and shortcuts.
Feb 08, 2014Andrew Wright rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Enjoyed somewhat, but ultimately couldn't finish. What otherwise is an entertaining collection of findings from social psychology and other thinking and human behavior focused disciplines is ruined by the author's strange compulsion to 'explain' the biases he identifies with random and entirely unconvincing musings about evolutionary origins. It's not enough to explain that we overweight the potential for loss over the potential for gain, which is interesting. Dobelli is compelled to clarify tha...more
May 21, 2013Daniel Taylor rated it it was amazing · review of another edition Shelves: business, great-books-of-the-21st-century, psychology
Entrepreneurs profit from understanding cognitive biases in two ways: first, you’ll make rational decisions; second, you’ll be an effective marketer.
The Art of Thinking Clearly exposes 99 cognitive biases – simple errors all of us make in our everyday thinking – and shows us how to become rational thinkers.
Author Rolf Dobelli brings a fresh perspective because of his unique skill-set. He’s a Swiss writer, novelist and entrepreneur. And he’s founder of an invitation-only society of the most disti...more
The Art of Thinking Clearly exposes 99 cognitive biases – simple errors all of us make in our everyday thinking – and shows us how to become rational thinkers.
Author Rolf Dobelli brings a fresh perspective because of his unique skill-set. He’s a Swiss writer, novelist and entrepreneur. And he’s founder of an invitation-only society of the most disti...more
Sep 22, 2018Yevgeniy Brikman rated it liked it · review of another edition
This book is a list of 99 common thinking errors and cognitive biases. Some of these you've probably heard many times before, but many will likely be new. I found it a quick, fun, interesting read, but it has 3 major flaws:
1. Because it's just a list of 99 disconnected items, with no common 'story' to tie them all together, you will forget the vast majority of it shortly after finishing the book.
2. The book will tell you about the thinking errors, but not the solutions. Granted, there is value...more
1. Because it's just a list of 99 disconnected items, with no common 'story' to tie them all together, you will forget the vast majority of it shortly after finishing the book.
2. The book will tell you about the thinking errors, but not the solutions. Granted, there is value...more
Nov 25, 2015Verylazydaisy marked it as did-not-finish · review of another edition
Sep 24, 2012Marc rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Nice book, extremely readable because of the 52 three page-chapters. The fallacies are very recognizable, often open doors, though Dobelli uses a lot of expensive words (action bias, endowment bias etc). All in all a beautifull collection of the dubious motives behind human actions.
But...Dobelli very often refers to practices in the world of management and financial investments; that says something about the public Dobelli is writing for. Most of the behavior he describes is to a high degree inf...more
But...Dobelli very often refers to practices in the world of management and financial investments; that says something about the public Dobelli is writing for. Most of the behavior he describes is to a high degree inf...more
Jan 06, 2016Benoit Lelièvre rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Left me a tad disappointed. Not that the knowledge in there is wrong or displayed arrogantly, but it's superficial and rather gimmicky. Nothing in this book is going to change the way you're thinking about anything. In fact, most people I believe are aware of cognitive dissonances, but are just defeated by them.
It was a pleasant read overall, but it would've benefited from having less chapters and going more in depth about the art of thinking about certain issues the proper way. In fact, this bo...more
Feb 15, 2018Abhijeet Jain rated it really liked it · review of another editionIt was a pleasant read overall, but it would've benefited from having less chapters and going more in depth about the art of thinking about certain issues the proper way. In fact, this bo...more
Shelves: self-help, non-fiction
The book is a collection of small chapters, each focusing psychological wrongdoings.
I loved a few chapters while others felt vague. Overall I loved it, mostly because author gave sufficient psychological experiment results to support his arguments. The author also made sure to give due credit to books and people who're ideas he used.
A lot of people have said in the reviews that this book is just a miniature of 'thinking slow & fast'.
Well, I am yet to read it, so can't comment on it.
You can f...more
I loved a few chapters while others felt vague. Overall I loved it, mostly because author gave sufficient psychological experiment results to support his arguments. The author also made sure to give due credit to books and people who're ideas he used.
A lot of people have said in the reviews that this book is just a miniature of 'thinking slow & fast'.
Well, I am yet to read it, so can't comment on it.
You can f...more
Sep 29, 2017Steph rated it really liked it · review of another edition
The Art of Thinking Clearly has great insight in every day thinking errors and how we can avoid them (I mean that is what the book is about lol) I read it over a span of several months, every few days a chapter, and while reading I kept thinking 'yes! exactly, this is fantastic I have to adjust my thinking process and remember this' but now that I have finished it I can barely remember anything I have read :D It's sad really. But nonetheless a really interesting read. Maybe it is a good idea to...more
Mar 13, 2014Meetu rated it really liked it · review of another edition
A good collection of fallacies inherent to our thinking. It does get repetitive at times. The human evolution examples seem a bit stretched at times. it's succinct descriptions of an exhaustive list of human errors makes it a good handbook. Aims to list out the points and that it does. I think it's a good text book - it covers the subject matter well. My thirteen year old son found it interesting! That's a strength - it should make for an easy read for anyone. Reason definitely needs advocates l...more
Jul 13, 2015Michael Huang rated it liked it · review of another edition
If you read some social science studies, chances are you already knew most of the biases the book covered. On the balance, not a huge waste of time if you read it cover to cover, and quite safe to skip.
Incidentally, this book came up in blinklist. I find the summary to be perhaps much more preferable to the whole book. So if these biases (eg, confirmation bias, group think, decision fatigue and paralysis) aren’t completely new concepts, the blinklist summary is a far better option.
Incidentally, this book came up in blinklist. I find the summary to be perhaps much more preferable to the whole book. So if these biases (eg, confirmation bias, group think, decision fatigue and paralysis) aren’t completely new concepts, the blinklist summary is a far better option.
Jan 26, 2015Franziska rated it did not like it · review of another edition
Banal. Nothing a psychology freshman wouldn't learn in his first week.
Nov 15, 2018Peyman s rated it it was ok · review of another edition
A book by serial plagiarist, Rolf dobelli, who has forcibly filled the papers with exact 99 chapters about bias/heuristic each has 2 and half pages.For god sake which savvy guy would impair the quality of work for certain quantity.
Another point,this book has lots of misattributed qoutes.
Instead of this book read 'black swan' by nassim taleb, 'thinking, fast & slow' by Daniel kahneman and 'predictibally irrational' by dan ariely.
And even persian translation has remarkable mistakes(3 translat...more
Another point,this book has lots of misattributed qoutes.
Instead of this book read 'black swan' by nassim taleb, 'thinking, fast & slow' by Daniel kahneman and 'predictibally irrational' by dan ariely.
And even persian translation has remarkable mistakes(3 translat...more
Oct 31, 2017Tien Le rated it really liked it · review of another edition
An incomplete summary of Thinking Fast and Slow but good to pick up once in awhile
Sep 06, 2016bladenomics rated it it was ok · review of another edition
An authority bias I developed some years ago by someone who had significant influence on my rationality (or irrationality) was that self-help genre was for the “weak lacking confidence in themselves”. It was looked down upon; even below the mediocrity plinth of Chetan Bhagat books. The person was the type who suffered what @oliverburkeman calls “clarity bias”: the assumption that those who don’t share your values aren’t just different, but are of poor intellect, less cool, confused. However, ev...more
Jul 10, 2013Loy Machedo rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Loy Machedo's Book Review - The Art of Thinking Clearly by Rolf Deobelli
Books on Reasoning, Critical Thinking and Analytical Thinking have lately found its place in my circle of focus. I guess In my role as a Coach, Trainer and Mentor I have found the need to Read in Between the lines especially when my clients open up to me. Which is where Rolf Deobelli's book comes into play.
The Author Deobelli' has complied a list of 100 tools of thinking which Communicators & Leaders can use to help them...more
Books on Reasoning, Critical Thinking and Analytical Thinking have lately found its place in my circle of focus. I guess In my role as a Coach, Trainer and Mentor I have found the need to Read in Between the lines especially when my clients open up to me. Which is where Rolf Deobelli's book comes into play.
The Author Deobelli' has complied a list of 100 tools of thinking which Communicators & Leaders can use to help them...more
Jun 22, 2015Noor rated it really liked it · review of another edition
The first thing that appealed to me about this book was its format. With 99 bite-sized chapters, almost all of which are no longer than three pages, I knew that this was a book into which I could casually dip in and out.
The topics dealt were intriguing, and generally relatable examples were provided. Nonetheless, at some points, the analogies drawn did not appear relevant to the cognitive biases being discussed, and occasionally I felt as though some analogies in themselves contained flaws of th...more
The topics dealt were intriguing, and generally relatable examples were provided. Nonetheless, at some points, the analogies drawn did not appear relevant to the cognitive biases being discussed, and occasionally I felt as though some analogies in themselves contained flaws of th...more
Sep 13, 2015Kaleido Books rated it really liked it · review of another edition
As a novelist and journalist, Rolf Dobelli has consumed huge amounts of research into how we think, and the common mistakes that all of us make when it comes to good decision making.
The great works of Daniel Kahneman, Nassim Taleb and even Aristotle get interpreted in an easy-to-read guide to the most common thinking mistakes.
In some ways, this is a great anti-self-help book, as it teaches us to be aware of confirmation bias, false correlations, misleading statistics and all the other ways that...more
The great works of Daniel Kahneman, Nassim Taleb and even Aristotle get interpreted in an easy-to-read guide to the most common thinking mistakes.
In some ways, this is a great anti-self-help book, as it teaches us to be aware of confirmation bias, false correlations, misleading statistics and all the other ways that...more
Nov 07, 2017Himanshu Prajapati rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
A beautifully written book, with distinct research areas connecting the dots on what fallacies we follow and what the actuality is. the short chapters sometimes seems feeble , however the examples given are accurate and effective in understanding. it is difficult to say that we may adopt all the recommendations , to be precise 99 recommendations , however even if we are able to adopt 10 of them , it would be a success story.
Rolf Dobelli has connected all the fallacies with each other. I think t...more
Rolf Dobelli has connected all the fallacies with each other. I think t...more
Jun 04, 2015Ghada marked it as to-read · review of another edition
I don't know about this one , the reviews are either really good or absolutely bad , but since I've already got it I'm gonna give it a try very soon
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Rolf Dobelli is a Swiss author and businessman. He began his writing career as a novelist in 2002, but he is best known internationally for his bestselling non-fiction The Art of Thinking Clearly (2011, English 2013), for which The Times has called him 'the self-help guru the Germans love'.
“Whether we like it or not, we are puppets of our emotions. We make complex decisions by consulting our feelings, not our thoughts. Against our best intentions, we substitute the question, “What do I think about this?” with “How do I feel about this?” So, smile! Your future depends on it.” — 32 likes
“How do you curb envy? First, stop comparing yourself to others. Second, find your “circle of competence” and fill it on your own. Create a niche where you are the best. It doesn’t matter how small your area of mastery is. The main thing is that you are king of the castle.” — 22 likes
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