Daniel Kahneman

Daniel Kahneman

Daniel Kahneman, Nobel laureate in Economic Sciences (2002), was a pioneering psychologist renowned for his groundbreaking research in decision-making and behavioral economics, conducted alongside Amos Tversky. As the Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology Emeritus at Princeton University and former professor at the Woodrow Wilson School, Kahneman reshaped our understanding of human judgment and bias. His influential works include the international bestseller Thinking, Fast and Slow, which explores the dual systems that drive our decisions, and Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment, co-authored with Olivier Sibony and Cass Sunstein, which examines variability in judgments. Kahneman’s legacy continues to impact economics, psychology, and beyond. He died in 2024.

  • Psychology
  • 1934-2024
  • Male
  • 1
  • Thinking Fast and SlowQuick View
    (0)

    Thinking Fast and Slow

    Your mind is a battleground between two selves: one impulsive and instinctual, the other deliberate and slow. Thinking, Fast and Slow pulls back the curtain on the quiet tug-of-war behind every choice we make—from trivial daily decisions to life-altering judgments—revealing just how often we are strangers to our own reasoning. What if your confidence is an illusion, your logic a mirage, and your certainty the mask of a hidden bias? With surgical clarity and unsettling insight, this book challenges not just how you think, but who you believe yourself to be.

    • Originally Published: 2011
    • Publisher: Penguin Books, 2024
    • Genre: Non-fiction
    • Pages: 624
    • Book Type: Hardcopy
    • ISBN: 9780141033570
    • Access: Members