Prof Jason Dojc

Outliers – Malcolm Gladwell

Malcolm Gladwell has the innate ability to take complicated phD studies, package them in an easy to understand way with the masses, and wrap them into a highly entertaining story. I’ve become a Gladwell completist and Outliers is my favourite. Let’s all put in our our 10,000 hours of practice.

Freakonomics – Steven Levitt & Stephen Dubner

Economics is the study of how humans respond to different incentives. Most economists study the monetary incentives. Steven Levitt studied a wide variety of incentives. From why there’s a correlation with crime and abortion rates, why terrorists don’t buy life insurance, whether standardized tests encourage cheating, and why some baby names get popular Levitt and …

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Predictably Irrational – Dan Ariely

We are hardly the rational, profit maximizing creatures that classical economists led us to believe. Emotions, psychological dispositions, and just the ways our brains are wired play a role. Through a series of experiments, Dan Ariely proves how irrational we are…but in a predictable way.

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind – Yuval Noah Harari

From primates to modern civilization in 443 pages (paperback edition). I heard author Yuval Noah Harari say on a podcast “History is not the study of events, but the study of change.” An insightful and mindblowing look at the long arc of human history from our hunter-gather ancestors to the agricultural, scientific, and industrial revolutions …

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Thinking Fast and Slow – Daniel Kahneman

The most important book I’ve ever read for understanding human behavior. Daniel Kahneman, the inventor of Behavioral Economics explains how our automatic System 1 brain and our deliberate System 2 brain interact with each other and the external environment

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