Hasty Briefsbeta

Clear Thinking

16 days ago
  • #self-improvement
  • #clear-thinking
  • #decision-making
  • Intuition is suitable for low-impact decisions, but systematic thinking is crucial for high-impact ones.
  • Decision quality is independent of outcome quality; good outcomes don't always mean good decisions.
  • Self-serving bias leads us to credit success to our abilities and blame failures on external factors.
  • Biological factors like hunger, sleep, and time of day significantly affect decision-making.
  • Emotional, ego, social, and inertia defaults influence our judgments and reactions.
  • Creating automatic rules (e.g., 'Never estimate on the spot') helps prevent poor decisions.
  • Problem definition and evaluating multiple options are key steps in decision-making.
  • Second-order thinking involves predicting consequences by asking 'and then what?'.
  • Assess decisions based on reversibility and consequences: ASAP for low-cost, ALAP for high-cost.
  • Documenting decisions and reflecting on mistakes improves future judgment.