How was a brilliant physics professor tricked into carrying 2kg of cocaine across the Argentinian border? Why do doctors misdiagnose 10 to 15% of their patients? Why do Nobel Prize winners spread fake news?We assume that smarter people are less prone to error. But greater education and expertise can often amplify our mistakes while rendering us blind to our biases. This is the 'intelligence trap'. Drawing on the latest behavioural science and historical examples from Socrates to Benjamin Franklin, David Robson demonstrates how to apply our intelligence more wisely; identify bias and enhance our 'rationality quotient'; read and regulate our emotions; fine-tune our intuition; navigate ambiguity and uncertainty; and think more flexibly about seemingly intractable problems.The twenty-first century presents us with complex problems that demand a wiser way of thinking. Whether you are a NASA scientist or a school student, The Intelligence Trap offers a new cognitive toolkit to realise your full potential.
CONTRIBUTORS: David RobsonEAN: 9781473669857COUNTRY: United KingdomPAGES: WEIGHT: 245 gHEIGHT: 196 cm
PUBLISHED BY: Hodder & StoughtonDATE PUBLISHED: 2020-02-06CITY: GENRE: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General, PHILOSOPHY / Mind & Body, PSYCHOLOGY / General, PSYCHOLOGY / Cognitive Neuroscience & Cognitive NeuropsychologyWIDTH: 128 cmSPINE:
Book Themes:
Cognition and cognitive psychology, Memory improvement and thinking techniques
Deftly digs into why smart people can do so many dumb things and leads us deep into the world of our own mental booby trap., We need to find new and better ways to teach critical thinking and measure good judgement. Reading David Robson's book would be a good place to start., An elegant survey of current thinking about thinking, and how best to do it without pride, prejudice, or arrogance., A startling, provocative and potently useful book., Brilliant. The Intelligence Trap combines mesmerising storytelling with groundbreaking new research about why having a high IQ can backfire. Essential reading for anyone who wants to think more clearly.
David Robson is an award-winning science journalist. He was a features editor at New Scientist for five years before joining BBC Future as a senior journalist, where he specialised in psychology, neuroscience and medicine. He regularly features on the radio discussing scientific issues, and his writing has also appeared in the Guardian, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Atlantic and the Washington Post.
Format: Paperback / softback
How was a brilliant physics professor tricked into carrying 2kg of cocaine across the Argentinian border? Why do doctors misdiagnose 10 to 15% of their patients? Why do Nobel Prize winners spread fake news?We assume that smarter people are less prone to error. But greater education and expertise can often amplify our mistakes while rendering us blind to our biases. This is the 'intelligence trap'. Drawing on the latest behavioural science and historical examples from Socrates to Benjamin Franklin, David Robson demonstrates how to apply our intelligence more wisely; identify bias and enhance our 'rationality quotient'; read and regulate our emotions; fine-tune our intuition; navigate ambiguity and uncertainty; and think more flexibly about seemingly intractable problems.The twenty-first century presents us with complex problems that demand a wiser way of thinking. Whether you are a NASA scientist or a school student, The Intelligence Trap offers a new cognitive toolkit to realise your full potential.
CONTRIBUTORS: David RobsonEAN: 9781473669857COUNTRY: United KingdomPAGES: WEIGHT: 245 gHEIGHT: 196 cm
PUBLISHED BY: Hodder & StoughtonDATE PUBLISHED: 2020-02-06CITY: GENRE: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General, PHILOSOPHY / Mind & Body, PSYCHOLOGY / General, PSYCHOLOGY / Cognitive Neuroscience & Cognitive NeuropsychologyWIDTH: 128 cmSPINE:
Book Themes:
Cognition and cognitive psychology, Memory improvement and thinking techniques
David Robson is an award-winning science journalist. He was a features editor at New Scientist for five years before joining BBC Future as a senior journalist, where he specialised in psychology, neuroscience and medicine. He regularly features on the radio discussing scientific issues, and his writing has also appeared in the Guardian, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Atlantic and the Washington Post.
I am amazed at the nuggets of wisdom offered in this book about what it means to be a woman. The book was written over 50 years ago but the author addresses issues women are facing in 2025 as if she were here with us . Clearly and lucidly she offers refreshing insights on the roles of women which are unique to women. Her courageous voice is a welcome relief from the clamour of dissenting voices and opinions that daily assaulting us in our hyped-up, information saturated, technology driven age!