Daniel Kahneman is Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Public Policy at Princeton University. He won the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 2002 for joint work with Amos Tversky in which they revealed the biases and heuristics with which humans operate, thereby deviating from the rationality presumed by economic theory at the time. Among this and many other awards, Danny was also given the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Barrack Obama. While Danny is likely best known outside of psychology for his book Thinking Fast and Slow, he and Robinson discuss his latest a book, co-authored with Olivier Simony and Cass Sunstein, called Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment, which concerns the astonishingly prevalent and damaging variability inherent in human judgment.
Noise: https://a.co/d/hbKBQKD
OUTLINE
00:00 In This Episode…
00:55 Introduction
06:16 Danny’s Childhood
11:23 The Difference Between Noise and Bias
16:21 Some Themes from Noise
18:57 Noise in the Judicial System
32:36 Noise in the Medical System
37:59 The Difficulty of Spotting Noise
39:58 Psychology and the Descriptive, Prescriptive, and Normative
43:14 Decision Hygiene for Reducing Bias and Noise in Judgment
54:32 Limiting Intuitions to Improve Decision-Making
01:00:38 Understanding Regression to the Mean
Robinson’s Website: http://robinsonerhardt.com
Robinson Erhardt researches symbolic logic and the foundations of mathematics at Stanford University. Join him in conversations with philosophers, scientists, weightlifters, artists, and everyone in-between.