Snippets

Daily Read #6 – 50 Ideas That Changed My Life

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Quick snippets from my morning read on Thursday, 22nd October 2020

Today’s daily read is extracted from David Perell’s “50 Ideas That Changed My Life” a summary of some really intriguing concepts that will lead you down numerous rabbit holes for weeks. These are my top 10, in no particular order.

1. The Paradox of Abundance:
The average quality of information is getting worse and worse. But the best stuff is getting better and better. Markets of abundance are simultaneously bad for the median consumer but good for conscious consumers.

2. Inversion:
Avoiding stupidity is easier than trying to be brilliant. Instead of asking, “How can I help my company?” you should ask, “What’s hurting my company the most and how can I avoid it?” Identify obvious failure points, and steer clear of them.

3. Mimetic Theory of Desire:
Humans are like sheep. We don’t know what we want, so we imitate each other. Instead of creating our own desires, we desire the same things as other people. The entire advertising industry is built on this idea.

4. Talent vs. Genius:
Society is good at training talent but terrible at cultivating genius. Talented people are good at hitting targets others can’t hit, but geniuses find targets others can’t see. They are opposite modes of excellence. Talent is predictable, genius is unpredictable.

5. Russell Conjugation:
Journalists often change the meaning of a sentence by replacing one word with a synonym that implies a different meaning. For example, the same person can support an estate tax but oppose a death tax — even though they are the same thing.

6. Bike-Shed Effect:
A group of people working on a project will fight over the most trivial ideas. They’ll ignore what’s complicated. They’ll focus too much on easy-to-understand ideas at the expense of important, but hard to talk about ideas. For example, instead of approving plans for a complicated spaceship, the team would argue over the color of the astronaut’s uniforms.

7. Goodhart’s Law:
When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure. One hospital took too long to admit patients so a penalty was given for 4+ hour wait times. In response, ambulance drivers were asked to slow down so they could shorten wait times.

8. The Paradox of Consensus:
Under ancient Jewish law, if a suspect was found guilty by every judge, they were deemed innocent. Too much agreement implied a systemic error in the judicial process. Unanimous agreement sometimes leads to bad decisions.

9. Via Negativa:
When we have a problem, our natural instinct is to add a new habit or purchase a fix. But sometimes, you can improve your life by taking things away. For example, the foods you avoid are more important than the foods you eat.

10. Penny Problem Gap:
Economists assume demand is linear, but people’s behavior totally changes once an action costs money. If the inventors of the Internet had known about it, spam wouldn’t be such a problem. If sending an email cost you $0.001, there’d be way less spam.

Read the full article with 40 more incredibly insightful summaries from David Perell’s “50 Ideas That Changed My Life

And as always, if you enjoyed this, check out the rest of my daily snippets, curated daily, right here on The Red Notebook.

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