The Upside of Irrationality:The Unexpected Benefits of Defying Logic at Work and at Home

The Upside of Irrationality:The Unexpected Benefits of Defying Logic at Work and at Home
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作者:
出版社: HarperCollins US
2010-06
ISBN: 9780061995033
定价: 261.50
装帧: 精装
开本: 其他
纸张: 其他
页数: 352页
正文语种: 英语
2人买过
  • Pleasenotethepagesonthisbookhavebeenproducedwithbevelledorroughedgetocreateanoldstylelook.Thepublisherhasdeliberatelychosentoproducethebookthisway.Theprovocativefollow-uptotheNewYorkTimesbestsellerPredictablyIrrationalWhycanlargebonusesmakeCEOslessproductive?Howcanconfusingdirectionsactuallyhelpus?Whyisrevengesoimportanttous?Whyistheresuchabigdifferencebetweenwhatwethinkwillmakeushappyandwhatreallymakesushappy?InhisgroundbreakingbookPredictablyIrrational,socialscientistDanArielyrevealedthemultiplebiasesthatleadusintomakingunwisedecisions.Now,inTheUpsideofIrrationality,heexposesthesurprisingnegativeandpositiveeffectsirrationalitycanhaveonourlives.Focusingonourbehaviorsatworkandinrelationships,heoffersnewinsightsandeye-openingtruthsaboutwhatreallymotivatesusonthejob,howoneunwiseactioncanbecomealong-termhabit,howwelearntolovetheoneswe'rewith,andmore.DrawingonthesameexperimentalmethodsthatmadePredictablyIrrationaloneofthemosttalked-aboutbestsellersofthepastfewyears,Arielyusesdatafromhisownoriginalandentertainingexperimentstodrawarrestingconclusionsabouthow—andwhy—webehavethewaywedo.Fromourofficeattitudes,toourromanticrelationships,tooursearchforpurposeinlife,Arielyexplainshowtobreakthroughournegativepatternsofthoughtandbehaviortomakebetterdecisions.TheUpsideofIrrationalitywillchangethewayweseeourselvesatworkandathome—andcastourirrationalbehaviorsinamorenuancedlight. DanArielyistheJamesB.DukeProfessorofPsychologyandBehavioralEconomicsatDukeUniversity,withappointmentsattheFuquaSchoolofBusiness,theCenterforCognitiveNeuroscience,theDepartmentofEconomics,andtheSchoolofMedicine.DanearnedonePhDincognitivepsychologyandanotherPhDinbusinessadministration.HeisthefounderanddirectoroftheCenterforAdvancedHindsight.Hisworkhasbeenfeaturedinmanyoutlets,includingTheNewYorkTimes,TheWallStreetJournal,TheWashingtonPost,TheBostonGlobe,andothers.HelivesinDurham,NorthCarolina,withhiswife,Sumi,andtheirtwocreativechildren,AmitandNeta. Introduction Lessons from Procrastination and Medical Side Effects 1
    Hepatitis and procrastination
    The movie treatment
    What we should do and behavioral economics
    From food to incompatible design
    Taking irrationality into account
    Part I THE UNEXPECTED WAYS WE DEFY LOGIC AT WORK
    Chapter 1 Paying More for Less: Why Big Bonuses Don't Always Work 17
    Of mice and men, or how high stakes affect rats and bankers
    Measuring the effects of a CEO-sized bonus in India
    Loss aversion: why bonuses aren't really bonuses
    Working under stress: just how clutch are "clutch" NBA players?
    Stage fright and the social side of high stakes
    Making compensation work for society
    Chapter 2 The Meaning of Labor: What Legos Can Teach Us about the Joy of Work 53
    You are what you do: identity and labor
    The pains of wasted work
    Lessons from a parrot---and some hungry rats
    Searching for meaning while playing with Legos
    Making work matter again
    Chapter 3 The IKEA Effect: Why We Overvalue What We Make 83
    Why IKEA makes us blush (with pride)
    Cooking lessons: finding a balance between just adding water and baking an apple pie from scratch
    The real value of a thousand origami cranes (and frogs)
    Customize it!
    Why "almost done" doesn't do much for us
    Why we need labors of love
    Chapter 4 The Not-Invented-Here Bias: Why "My" Ideas Are Better than "Yours" 107
    Mark Twain describes a universal form of stupidity
    "Anything you can do I can do better": why we favor our own ideas
    The toothbrush theory
    What we can learn from Edison's mistake 7
    Chapter 5 The Case for Revenge: What Makes Us Seek Justice? 123
    The joys of payback
    The bailouts and pounds of flesh
    One man's quest for revenge against Audi
    The etiquette of revenge
    Companies beware: when consumers go public
    Uses and misuses of revenge
    Making amends
    Part II THE UNEXPECTED WAYS WE DEFY LOGIC AT HOME
    Chapter 6 On Adaptation: Why We Get Used to Things (but Not All Things, and Not Always) 157
    Frogs: to boil or not to boil?
    Adapting to visual cues and pain thresholds
    Hedonic adaptation: from houses to spouses and beyond
    How the hedonic treadmill keeps us buying---and buying more
    How we can break and enhance adaptation
    Making our adaptability work for us
    Chapter 7 Hot or Not? Adaptation, Assortative Mating, and the Beauty Market 191
    A personal adaptation
    When mind and body don't get along
    Sticking to our own (more or less hot) kind in dating: do we settle or adapt?
    Let's ask the Internet: dating sites and romantic criteria
    How I met your mother
    Chapter 8 When a Market Fails: An Example from Online Dating 213
    The function of the yenta
    The dysfunctional singles market (as if you didn't already know)
    The difference between your date and a digital camera
    An exemplary failure in dating
    How dating sites skew our perceptions
    Ideas for a better dating future
    Chapter 9 On Empathy and Emotion: Why We Respond to One Person Who Needs Help but Not to Many 237
    Baby Jessica versus the Rwandan genocide
    The difference between an individual and a statistic
    Identification: needed for more than buying beer
    How the American Cancer Society reels us in
    The effect of rational thinking on giving
    Overcoming our inability to confront big problems
    Chapter 10 The Long-Term Effects of Short-Term Emotions: Why We Shouldn't Act on Our Negative Feelings 257
    Don't tread on me: my colleague learns a lesson about rudeness
    The dark side of impulses
    Deciding under the influence (of emotions)
    The importance of "irrelevant" emotions
    What a canoe can tell you about your love life
    Chapter 11 Lessons from Our Irrationalities: Why We Need to Test Everything 281
    A decision about life and limb
    Gideon's biblical empiricism
    The wisdom of leeches
    Lessons learned, hopefully
    Thanks 297
    List of Collaborators 299
    Notes 305
    Bibliography and Additional Readings 307
    Index 319
  • 内容简介:
    Pleasenotethepagesonthisbookhavebeenproducedwithbevelledorroughedgetocreateanoldstylelook.Thepublisherhasdeliberatelychosentoproducethebookthisway.Theprovocativefollow-uptotheNewYorkTimesbestsellerPredictablyIrrationalWhycanlargebonusesmakeCEOslessproductive?Howcanconfusingdirectionsactuallyhelpus?Whyisrevengesoimportanttous?Whyistheresuchabigdifferencebetweenwhatwethinkwillmakeushappyandwhatreallymakesushappy?InhisgroundbreakingbookPredictablyIrrational,socialscientistDanArielyrevealedthemultiplebiasesthatleadusintomakingunwisedecisions.Now,inTheUpsideofIrrationality,heexposesthesurprisingnegativeandpositiveeffectsirrationalitycanhaveonourlives.Focusingonourbehaviorsatworkandinrelationships,heoffersnewinsightsandeye-openingtruthsaboutwhatreallymotivatesusonthejob,howoneunwiseactioncanbecomealong-termhabit,howwelearntolovetheoneswe'rewith,andmore.DrawingonthesameexperimentalmethodsthatmadePredictablyIrrationaloneofthemosttalked-aboutbestsellersofthepastfewyears,Arielyusesdatafromhisownoriginalandentertainingexperimentstodrawarrestingconclusionsabouthow—andwhy—webehavethewaywedo.Fromourofficeattitudes,toourromanticrelationships,tooursearchforpurposeinlife,Arielyexplainshowtobreakthroughournegativepatternsofthoughtandbehaviortomakebetterdecisions.TheUpsideofIrrationalitywillchangethewayweseeourselvesatworkandathome—andcastourirrationalbehaviorsinamorenuancedlight.
  • 作者简介:
    DanArielyistheJamesB.DukeProfessorofPsychologyandBehavioralEconomicsatDukeUniversity,withappointmentsattheFuquaSchoolofBusiness,theCenterforCognitiveNeuroscience,theDepartmentofEconomics,andtheSchoolofMedicine.DanearnedonePhDincognitivepsychologyandanotherPhDinbusinessadministration.HeisthefounderanddirectoroftheCenterforAdvancedHindsight.Hisworkhasbeenfeaturedinmanyoutlets,includingTheNewYorkTimes,TheWallStreetJournal,TheWashingtonPost,TheBostonGlobe,andothers.HelivesinDurham,NorthCarolina,withhiswife,Sumi,andtheirtwocreativechildren,AmitandNeta.
  • 目录:
    Introduction Lessons from Procrastination and Medical Side Effects 1
    Hepatitis and procrastination
    The movie treatment
    What we should do and behavioral economics
    From food to incompatible design
    Taking irrationality into account
    Part I THE UNEXPECTED WAYS WE DEFY LOGIC AT WORK
    Chapter 1 Paying More for Less: Why Big Bonuses Don't Always Work 17
    Of mice and men, or how high stakes affect rats and bankers
    Measuring the effects of a CEO-sized bonus in India
    Loss aversion: why bonuses aren't really bonuses
    Working under stress: just how clutch are "clutch" NBA players?
    Stage fright and the social side of high stakes
    Making compensation work for society
    Chapter 2 The Meaning of Labor: What Legos Can Teach Us about the Joy of Work 53
    You are what you do: identity and labor
    The pains of wasted work
    Lessons from a parrot---and some hungry rats
    Searching for meaning while playing with Legos
    Making work matter again
    Chapter 3 The IKEA Effect: Why We Overvalue What We Make 83
    Why IKEA makes us blush (with pride)
    Cooking lessons: finding a balance between just adding water and baking an apple pie from scratch
    The real value of a thousand origami cranes (and frogs)
    Customize it!
    Why "almost done" doesn't do much for us
    Why we need labors of love
    Chapter 4 The Not-Invented-Here Bias: Why "My" Ideas Are Better than "Yours" 107
    Mark Twain describes a universal form of stupidity
    "Anything you can do I can do better": why we favor our own ideas
    The toothbrush theory
    What we can learn from Edison's mistake 7
    Chapter 5 The Case for Revenge: What Makes Us Seek Justice? 123
    The joys of payback
    The bailouts and pounds of flesh
    One man's quest for revenge against Audi
    The etiquette of revenge
    Companies beware: when consumers go public
    Uses and misuses of revenge
    Making amends
    Part II THE UNEXPECTED WAYS WE DEFY LOGIC AT HOME
    Chapter 6 On Adaptation: Why We Get Used to Things (but Not All Things, and Not Always) 157
    Frogs: to boil or not to boil?
    Adapting to visual cues and pain thresholds
    Hedonic adaptation: from houses to spouses and beyond
    How the hedonic treadmill keeps us buying---and buying more
    How we can break and enhance adaptation
    Making our adaptability work for us
    Chapter 7 Hot or Not? Adaptation, Assortative Mating, and the Beauty Market 191
    A personal adaptation
    When mind and body don't get along
    Sticking to our own (more or less hot) kind in dating: do we settle or adapt?
    Let's ask the Internet: dating sites and romantic criteria
    How I met your mother
    Chapter 8 When a Market Fails: An Example from Online Dating 213
    The function of the yenta
    The dysfunctional singles market (as if you didn't already know)
    The difference between your date and a digital camera
    An exemplary failure in dating
    How dating sites skew our perceptions
    Ideas for a better dating future
    Chapter 9 On Empathy and Emotion: Why We Respond to One Person Who Needs Help but Not to Many 237
    Baby Jessica versus the Rwandan genocide
    The difference between an individual and a statistic
    Identification: needed for more than buying beer
    How the American Cancer Society reels us in
    The effect of rational thinking on giving
    Overcoming our inability to confront big problems
    Chapter 10 The Long-Term Effects of Short-Term Emotions: Why We Shouldn't Act on Our Negative Feelings 257
    Don't tread on me: my colleague learns a lesson about rudeness
    The dark side of impulses
    Deciding under the influence (of emotions)
    The importance of "irrelevant" emotions
    What a canoe can tell you about your love life
    Chapter 11 Lessons from Our Irrationalities: Why We Need to Test Everything 281
    A decision about life and limb
    Gideon's biblical empiricism
    The wisdom of leeches
    Lessons learned, hopefully
    Thanks 297
    List of Collaborators 299
    Notes 305
    Bibliography and Additional Readings 307
    Index 319
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