Daniel Gilbert is Harvard College Professor of Psychology at Harvard University. He has won numerous awards for his teaching and research, including the American Psychological Association's Distinguished Scientific Award for an Early Career Contribution to Psychology. His research has been covered by The New York Times Magazine, Forbes, Money, CNN, U.S. News & World Report, The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal, Scientific American, Self, Men's Health, Redbook, Glamour, Psychology Today, and many others. His short stories have appeared in Amazing Stories and Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, as well as other magazines and anthologies. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Why are lovers quicker to forgive their partners for infidelity than for leaving dirty dishes in the sink? Why will sighted people pay more to avoid going blind than blind people will pay to regain their sight? Why do dining companions insist on ordering different meals instead of getting what they really want? Why do patients remember long medical procedures as being less painful than short ones? Why do home sellers demand prices they wouldn’t dream of paying if they were home buyers? Why are shoppers happier when they can’t get refunds? Why do pigeons seem to have such excellent aim; why can’t we remember one song while listening to another; and why does the line at the grocery store always slow down the moment we join it?
In this brilliant, witty, and accessible book, renowned Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert describes the foibles of imagination and illusions of foresight that cause each of us to misconceive our tomorrows and misestimate our satisfactions. Vividly bringing to life the latest scientific research in psychology, cognitive neuroscience, philosophy, and behavioral economics, Gilbert reveals what scientists have discovered about the uniquely human ability to imagine the future, and about our capacity to predict how much we will like it when we get there. With penetrating insight and sparkling prose, Gilbert explains why we seem to know so little about the hearts and minds of the people we are about to become.</p>
看了半本书之后,发现封面封底上这些推荐人,大多都是吭爹啊。你们有真正看过书吗?哪怕看一下作者的序,应该也就不会写出这样的推荐语来吧?!真是不负责任瞎推荐! 中方出版社把书扣上"哈佛幸福课"的帽子,纯粹是为了营销吧。。 如果你期待在书中找到臻达幸福的妙方,那...
評分看了半本书之后,发现封面封底上这些推荐人,大多都是吭爹啊。你们有真正看过书吗?哪怕看一下作者的序,应该也就不会写出这样的推荐语来吧?!真是不负责任瞎推荐! 中方出版社把书扣上"哈佛幸福课"的帽子,纯粹是为了营销吧。。 如果你期待在书中找到臻达幸福的妙方,那...
評分“If anything can go wrong, it will.”Ever since a US Air Force engineer called Ed Murphy made this curse in 1949 when finding that every piece of a project was wired exactly the wrong way, adding new entries to this so-called Murphy’s Law has become a pop...
評分且不说书好书坏,就说一条:这书的书名就是坑人。它从头到尾介绍的都是人做的计划和对未来的决定为什么是不准的,怎样才能准。 应该叫《哈佛规划课》。 再说内容,很多都和丹·艾瑞里教授的《怪诞行为学》重复了。虽然这两本书可能没有个先来后到,但我看这两本书却是有先后...
評分且不说书好书坏,就说一条:这书的书名就是坑人。它从头到尾介绍的都是人做的计划和对未来的决定为什么是不准的,怎样才能准。 应该叫《哈佛规划课》。 再说内容,很多都和丹·艾瑞里教授的《怪诞行为学》重复了。虽然这两本书可能没有个先来后到,但我看这两本书却是有先后...
一點不真誠,有功夫扯皮不如幾句話概括完
评分從書名上看齣,這並不是一本教你如何變得更加幸福的書。這本書闡述瞭大眾對於幸福的常見錯誤認知,比如金錢,地位,天生缺陷,挫摺對於幸福感的長期影響。作者羅列瞭很多有趣並且嚴密的實驗,說明瞭人對未來幸福感的預測和記憶有著相同的一些缺陷,比如省略細節,... 此外,還有一個重大不足,就是低估自己在大喜大悲之後的復原力。 一些有趣的事實: 1. 人是唯一會思考未來的動物,因為我們有比較特彆的大腦前葉。 2. 大多數連體人並不想分開。本書對我的三大啓示:一,記憶是個極其不可靠的東西,有可能的話盡量記錄下來。二,幻(yi)想(ying)是不個極其不可靠的東西,喜歡作者的建議 - 多讀書,從而知道其他人在這些情況真正發生時的感受。三, 人更容易悔恨沒做的事,而不是做過的事,so just do it.
评分對Happiness研究的review,感覺重點是人對happiness level的預測能力,以及迴歸於base line的傾嚮。有點經濟行為學的味道?
评分還挺搞笑的。提到瞭大量的對比試驗,都挺有趣的
评分有意思的是,這本書不是教你如何變得快樂, 而且探討人們如何看待開心快樂這件事,一般來說,對於當下的心情,人們的描述還是相當準確的, 但接下來就談到瞭過去和未來,人就開始使用MEMORY 和 IMAGINATION... 但它們是FLAWED AND BIASED...看這本書的時候深切體會到黑天鵝作者的關於QUOTE的說明,都是心理學傢,這本書引用的很多研究跟THINKING , FAST AND SLOW 相似,隻是有的地方解釋有點不同.
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