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Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters [Kõva köide]

3.84/5 (6475 hinnangut Goodreads-ist)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 432 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 236x159x36 mm, kaal: 624 g, 65 FIGURES AND IMAGES THROUGHOUT
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Sep-2021
  • Kirjastus: Viking
  • ISBN-10: 0525561994
  • ISBN-13: 9780525561996
  • Formaat: Hardback, 432 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 236x159x36 mm, kaal: 624 g, 65 FIGURES AND IMAGES THROUGHOUT
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Sep-2021
  • Kirjastus: Viking
  • ISBN-10: 0525561994
  • ISBN-13: 9780525561996
Can reading a book make you more rational? Can it help us understand why there is so much irrationality in the world? The author of Enlightenment Now answers all the questions.

"Can reading a book make you more rational? Can it explain why there seems to be so much irrationality in the world, including, let's be honest, in each of us? These are the goals of Steven Pinker's follow-up to Enlightenment Now (Bill Gates's "new favorite book of all time"). Humans today are often portrayed as cavemen out of time, poised to react to a lion in the grass with a suite of biases, blind spots, fallacies, and illusions. But this, Pinker a cognitive scientist and rational optimist argues, cannot be the whole picture. Hunter-gatherers--our ancestors and contemporaries--are not nervous rabbits but cerebral problem-solvers. A list of the ways in which we are stupid cannot explain how we're so smart: how we discovered the laws of nature, transformed the planet, and lengthened and enriched our lives. Indeed, if humans were fundamentally irrational, how did they discover the benchmarks for rationality against which humans fall short? The topic could not be more timely. In the 21st century, humanityis reaching new heights of scientific understanding--and at the same time appears to be losing its mind. How can a species that sequenced the genome and detected the Big Bang produce so much fake news, quack cures, conspiracy theories, and "post-truth" rhetoric? A big part of Rationality is to explain these tools--to inspire an intuitive understanding of the benchmarks of rationality, so you can understand the basics of logic, critical thinking, probability, correlation and causation, the optimal ways toadjust our beliefs and commit to decisions with uncertain evidence, and the yardsticks for making rational choices alone and with others. Rationality matters. As the world reels from foolish choices made in the past and dreads a future that may be shapedby senseless choices in the present, rationality may be the most important asset that citizens and influencers command. Steven Pinker, the great defender of human progress, having documented how the world is not falling apart, now shows how we can enhance rationality in our lives and in the public sphere. Rationality is the perfect toolkit to seize our own fates"--
Preface xiii
1 How Rational an Animal?
1(34)
2 Rationality and Irrationality
35
3 Logic and Critical Thinking
13(98)
4 Probability and Randomness
111(38)
5 Beliefs and Evidence (Bayesian Reasoning)
149
6 Risk and Reward (Rational Choice and Expected Utility)
113(88)
7 Hits and False Alarms (Signal Detection and Statistical Decision Theory)
201(26)
8 Self and Others (Game Theory)
227(18)
9 Correlation and Causation
245(38)
10 What's Wrong with People?
283(36)
11 Why Rationality Matters
319(22)
Notes 341(20)
References 361(28)
Index of Biases and Fallacies 389(2)
Index 391