Thinking, Fast and Slow
In economics, people are usually assumed to be rational agents making consistent and logical choices. However, Kahneman dismantled this assumption by exposing the physical realities of our cognitive hardware. To me, Thinking, Fast and Slow reads less like a traditional psychology book and more like a brutally honest system specifications manual for the human brain. Our brain is a machine with limited computing power, strictly constrained by evolutionary hardware, historical biases, and inherent “bugs.” Kahneman uses System 1 and System 2 to explain our processing architecture. For example, when you meet someone and instantly feel that their “vibe is off,” it might seem like an irrational prejudice. However, Kahneman explains this biologically: our amygdala performs rapid feature hashing and pattern recognition, wiring us to sense potential threats in a microsecond based on past data. Knowing this, we shouldn’t waste cognitive bandwidth feeling guilty about these initial biases. They are purely physical, cause-and-effect mechanisms. Instead, true rationality is utilizing your logical processor (System 2) to override or verify if the alarm raised by the intuitive brain (System 1) is actually a valid threat before weaponizing it into a permanent judgment. ...