@markdawson425

It's a great book, love it, everyone should read it twice. Once fast, once slow.

@user-dxnem

Be positive 🌟

Charles Franklin Kettering, inventor and philosopher says, “Tomorrow cannot be better while you are thinking about the past all the time.” Yes, be positive in your vision of the present and the future, and then you can change all the mistakes and problems of the past

@jyvra

“Nothing in life is as important as you think it is, while you are thinking about it.” - Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow

@siyaramsiyaram1934

Think calmly..
Act quick!
Just Starting the work is the main key :)

@warith451

Thanks for taking time to produce such a treasure for all of us who strive to make the best decisions we can for ourselves.

@briza2022

Specially when we are in times of competitive companies and the fast information, there is more temptation to not think much of what we do.

@kennethgarcia25

Kahneman talks about these "systems" as a dichotomy rather than a continuum.  I have called these systems (1) acquisition and (2) performance as they related to learning a musical instrument or anything.  With time, its been clear that there is an unconscious, automated processing of highly overrehearsed information which shuts incoming signal more directly through the striatum and chunked loops therein, whereas when there is novelty or surprise or higher levels of uncertainty, incoming data is shunted more directly through the DLPFC and distributed through the cortex to pattern match with less rehearsed, more novel patterns in order to build new ensemble-based patterns from which new automation may be developed if there is enough stereotypical performance redundancy.  Many operations may mix these processes depending on the degree of stereotypy versus novelty/urgency/uncertainty.  And despite the fact that I've known this for the past 20 years, the Nobel prize committee did not even invite me for coffee.

@davidryan9756

A clear explanation of the two systems- useful to keep in mind

@KLDBIS

Thank you and rest in peace Prof Kahneman ♥♥♥

@WolfRhymesEntertainment

i sometimes time myself in drawing fast vs drawing slow and of course the drawing is way better drawing slow but i think both systems should be practiced. never stay on one system but balance the 2. if i am drawing a comic strip, and i spend 30 min per drawing for 50 frames in system 1 which is fast drawing and then i practice drawing in system 2 which is slow drawing for like 8 hrs per frame, for 50 frames, i feel the balancing of practicing both increases both systems intelligence and speed.

@fergoesdayton

“The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.” – Albert Einstein

@dorianphilotheates3769

Interviewer: “What’s the difference between thinking fast and thinking slow?” — Me: “Thinking fast is thinking fast. Thinking slow is thinking slow.”

@sutenTaHotep

Astounding insight. My immediate impulse tells me to run out & get the book but perhaps I should apply the 2nd strategy & see if it publishes somewhere on the web for free (^-^).  Nah, I'm getting that book

@ammarkhawer7807

In 1 system you explore new concepts while while in other you execute them in a habitual manner

@jurivaltanen8414

Excellent book! Lots of food of thought. Recommended to everyone and particularly to those who needs to know more about decisions and choices. You will be surprised! Thank you Daniel!!

@BarnabyBarry

We have to test our beliefs (intuition) to make them valid(sometimes thinking does not work)

@jelanimasego8656

Interesting for personality typing. Which people feel most comfortable in type 1 or 2? I’d say type 2 is more rare and perhaps have to be training.

@dustin2k

awesome book lowkey my fav book so far

@HideSeek_Soje111

My brain is often pure chaos. At least part of it is. It's kind of broken. It's an amazing thing to watch.

@carloseduardonaranjosuarez5917

Thank you very much Dr. Kahneman, amazing finding outs