Shortly before Daniel Kahneman died last March, he emailed friends a message: He was choosing to end his own life in ...
Renowned psychologist Daniel Kahneman opted for assisted suicide in Switzerland, sharing his decision with close friends. He ...
Kahneman, best known for his groundbreaking book Thinking, Fast and Slow, had kept his decision private, confiding only in ...
Embracing a bias for action and trusting our gut feelings can often lead to better outcomes, even when the stakes are high.
You could call Daniel Kahneman the unicorn of economics. As a psychologist, he had a profound influence on people who criticized the homo economics, the theoretical notion that our economic decisions ...
The right answer is: The ball costs a nickel. “Clearly, these respondents offered their responses without first checking,” observes Daniel Kahneman, the Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology and a ...
Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and DesignFlickrDont punish bad luck. Evaluating peoples results, as opposed to the effort they put in, may penalize bad luck and reward good luck.
In the study, Daniel Kahneman and Angus Deaton reviewed more than 450,000 responses to a daily well-being survey of 1,000 U.S. residents and found that emotional well-being increased with rising ...
Daniel Kahneman, author of the popular book “Thinking, Fast and Slow”, had not told anyone about his decision apart from close friends and family.