• Thinking- Fast and Slow
  • Thinking- Fast and Slow

Fast And Slow - Thinking-

| Key Principle | Meaning | | :--- | :--- | | | Losing $100 hurts about twice as much as gaining $100 feels good. | | Diminishing Sensitivity | The difference between $0 and $100 feels huge; $900 to $1,000 feels small. | | Reference Point | You judge outcomes as gains or losses relative to your current state , not as absolute wealth. |

| Self | Measures | Bias | Example | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Moment-to-moment pain/pleasure | Ignores duration (duration neglect) | A 60-second warm bath + 1 second freezing cold is mostly pleasant moment-by-moment. | | Remembering | The story of the experience | Focuses on peak and end (Peak-End Rule) | The same bath is remembered as awful because of the cold ending. | Thinking- Fast and Slow

1. The Core Concept: Two Systems The book’s foundation is the division of the mind into two fictional characters. | Key Principle | Meaning | | :---

| System | Nickname | Operation | Speed | Effort | Control | Examples | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | The Autopilot | Automatic, associative, intuitive | Instant | Zero | Involuntary | Detect anger in a voice, solve 2+2, read a billboard. | | System 2 | The Conscious Controller | Deliberate, analytical, rule-following | Slow | High | Voluntary | Focus on a loud crowd, compute 17×24, check a logical argument. | | | Self | Measures | Bias |

Most people reject a coin flip where they lose $100 or gain $200 (expected value +$50) because the fear of loss outweighs the potential gain. 5. Two Selves (The Final Part) Kahneman distinguishes between the experiencing self and the remembering self.

Total:

| Key Principle | Meaning | | :--- | :--- | | | Losing $100 hurts about twice as much as gaining $100 feels good. | | Diminishing Sensitivity | The difference between $0 and $100 feels huge; $900 to $1,000 feels small. | | Reference Point | You judge outcomes as gains or losses relative to your current state , not as absolute wealth. |

| Self | Measures | Bias | Example | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Moment-to-moment pain/pleasure | Ignores duration (duration neglect) | A 60-second warm bath + 1 second freezing cold is mostly pleasant moment-by-moment. | | Remembering | The story of the experience | Focuses on peak and end (Peak-End Rule) | The same bath is remembered as awful because of the cold ending. |

1. The Core Concept: Two Systems The book’s foundation is the division of the mind into two fictional characters.

| System | Nickname | Operation | Speed | Effort | Control | Examples | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | The Autopilot | Automatic, associative, intuitive | Instant | Zero | Involuntary | Detect anger in a voice, solve 2+2, read a billboard. | | System 2 | The Conscious Controller | Deliberate, analytical, rule-following | Slow | High | Voluntary | Focus on a loud crowd, compute 17×24, check a logical argument. |

Most people reject a coin flip where they lose $100 or gain $200 (expected value +$50) because the fear of loss outweighs the potential gain. 5. Two Selves (The Final Part) Kahneman distinguishes between the experiencing self and the remembering self.

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