000 01722nam a2200181Ia 4500
020 _a978-1107644595
082 _a153.4 CUM
100 _aCummins, Denise D
245 _aGood thinking : seven powerful ideas that influence the way we think
250 _a-
260 _bCambridge
_aNew Delhi
_c2013
300 _avii,199p.
500 _aRs.245/-
505 _antroduction -- Game theory: when you're not the only one choosing -- Rational choice: choosing what is most likely to give you what you want -- Moral decision-making: how we tell right from wrong -- The game of logic -- What causes what? -- Hypothesis testing: truth and evidence -- Problem solving: turning what you don't want into what you want
520 _aDo you know what economists mean when they refer to you as a "rational agent"? Or why a psychologist might label your idea a "creative insight"? Or how a philosopher could be logical but also passionate in persuading you to obey "moral imperatives"? Or why scientists disagree about the outcomes of experiments comparing drug treatments and disease risk factors? After reading this book, you will be wiser in two ways: You will know how the best and brightest thinkers judge the ways we decide, argue, solve problems, and tell right from wrong. But you will also understand why, when we don't meet these standards, it is not always a bad thing. The answers are rooted in the way the human brain has been evolutionarily wired over time to make us kinder and more generous than economists think we ought to be, and more resistant to change and persuasion than scientists and scholars think we ought to be.
650 _aPersonal development
_aRational choice theory
_aGame theory
942 _cBK
999 _c100494
_d100494