Books by Annie Duke
“Quitting should be viewed as a skill. This book showed me that it is a superpower to know when to walk away. I believe I have learned to recognize when it is time to quit. I think we get better at this as the years go by. As a society, we celebrate not giving up. We revere perseverance and determination. While these are important values, I believe that we should also celebrate quitting. Even though quitting may not make the most favorable impression and it’s difficult to admit that we were wrong, doing so may set us on the path to happiness.” Read more...
“Annie Duke…is an ex-professional poker player who got very interested in cognitive behavioural decision science. She tried to become an expert on how people make decisions and what her poker years could potentially teach her about it, and then she wrote this book, Thinking in Bets. In it, she compares poker to chess. She explains that chess is an information-complete game. The two players who look at the board know exactly what’s happening, they have all the information at their disposal, and they know the complete state of the world. Of course, they don’t know what the other player is thinking, but no information from the game is hidden. In poker, it’s the opposite. You know the cards you have in your hands, but most of the information is hidden. You don’t know what the other players around the table have in their hands and you don’t know the cards that are about to be revealed. It’s very much an information-incomplete game.” Read more...
Interviews where books by Annie Duke were recommended
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1
Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About The World — And Why Things Are Better Than You Think
by Hans Rosling -
2
The Signal and the Noise
by Nate Silver -
3
Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction
by Dan Gardner & Philip E Tetlock -
4
Thinking in Bets: Making Smarter Decisions When You Don't Have All the Facts
by Annie Duke -
5
Hello World: How to Be Human in the Age of the Machine
by Hannah Fry
The best books on Using Data to Understand the World, recommended by Edouard Mathieu
The best books on Using Data to Understand the World, recommended by Edouard Mathieu
Even as more and more data becomes available, many of us have a view of the world that doesn’t correspond to reality. On probabilities in particular, people tend to be completely clueless. Here Edouard Mathieu, Head of Data at Oxford-based research group Our World in Data, recommends books to help readers not only use data to better understand the world, but also make better decisions in daily life.
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1
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life
by Erving Goffman -
2
Popular: The Power of Likability in a Status-Obsessed World
by Mitch Prinstein -
3
Quit: The Power of Knowing When to Walk Away
by Annie Duke -
4
The Person You Mean to Be: How Good People Fight Bias
by Dolly Chugh -
5
The Odyssey
by Homer and translated by Emily Wilson
The best books on Making A Good Impression, recommended by Övül Sezer
The best books on Making A Good Impression, recommended by Övül Sezer
From the classroom to the boardroom, everybody tries (and sometimes fails) to be liked and admired by others. In this interview, Övül Sezer—Assistant Professor of Management and Organizations at Cornell University—recommends five books that can help you make a good impression on everybody, including yourself.