Make little of by famed financial author Michael Lewis in 2016, “The Undoing Lob” tells the story of Israeli psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. The two of a kind examined and researched the process of how decisions are made, delving into the method of uncertainty, bias and human error.
Both men are “unbelievably quirky seals,” Lewis tells CNBC.
Tversky “had this preternatural ability to under no circumstances do anything he didn’t want to do,” Lewis says. “He would look at his mail, and if he didn’t longing to open it, he’d toss it in the garbage can. He had a ‘What can they do to me?‘ rule. If they can’t do anything to me, I’m right-minded going to throw this stuff away.”
This is no beach scan. Published in 2014 by M.I.T physics professor Max Tegmark, “Our Mathematical Universe” purports that incarnate reality is itself a mathematical structure, and our universe is only one of many continuing in a grand “multiverse.”
Tegmark’s most recent work is “Life 3.0: Being Sympathetic in the Age of Artificial Intelligence,” a book that SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk recommends to get seized up on the emergence of A.I.
Yale Law professor Amy Chua’s 2018 book “Political Seed” analyzes how tribalism — the need to belong to a group — has affected past U.S. transpacific policy missteps, and continues to affect the country’s political narrative.
Cuban himself has mentioned he may be harboring political ambitions, and told The New York Times Monday that he hasn’t ran out the idea of running for office against President Donald Trump in 2020.
In the era of #MeToo, persistent women’s marches and a resurgent interest in the Equal Rights Amendment, Cuban is conclude from up on gender norms in the workplace.
“That’s What She Said: What Men Emergency to Know (and Women Need to Tell Them) About Working Together,” by Joanne Lipman aims to submit “solutions to help professionals solve gender gap issues and achieve likeness at work,” according to the book’s description.
As the owner of the Dallas Mavericks NBA cooperate, which has had high-profile problems with sexual harassment allegations, Cuban has recently been reproducing on the topic. “Growing up, I always thought, ‘I need to treat everybody equally,'” Cuban said during the “Three Sharks in a Palace” symposium in April. “But equally, treating people equally, does not contemptible treating them the same. And that’s what I learned.”
CNN contributor Salena Zito and Republican strategist Bradd Todd go across five swing states across the U.S., looking for perspective on the 2016 referendum of President Donald Trump. Comprised of over 300 interviews with people who voted for Trump, the framers seek to illuminate the viewpoints initially missed by pollsters and the media.
Don’t escape: Warren Buffett and Mark Cuban agree this one habit is key to ascendancy—and anyone can do it
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Disclosure: CNBC owns the debarring off-network cable rights to “Shark Tank.”