You are not so smart Why you have too many friends on Facebook, why your memory is mostly fiction, and 46 other ways you're deluding yourself

David McRaney

Book - 2011

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Subjects
Published
New York : Gotham Books/Penguin Group 2011.
Language
English
Main Author
David McRaney (-)
Physical Description
xvi, 302 pages ; 20 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 279-302).
ISBN
9781592406593
  • Introduction You
  • 1. Priming
  • 2. Confabulation
  • 3. Confirmation Bias
  • 4. Hindsight Bias
  • 5. The Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy
  • 6. Procrastination
  • 7. Normalcy Bias
  • 8. Introspection
  • 9. The Availability Heuristic
  • 10. The Bystander Effect
  • 11. The Dunning-Kruger Effect
  • 12. Apophenia
  • 13. Brand Loyalty
  • 14. The Argument from Authority
  • 15. The Argument from Ignorance
  • 16. The Straw Man Fallacy
  • 17. The Ad Hominem Fallacy
  • 18. The Just-World Fallacy
  • 19. The Public Goods Game
  • 20. The Ultimatum Game
  • 21. Subjective Validation
  • 22. Cult Indoctrination
  • 23. Groupthink
  • 24. Supernormal Releasers
  • 25. The Affect Heuristic
  • 26. Dunbar's Number
  • 27. Selling Out
  • 28. Self-Serving Bias
  • 29. The Spotlight Effect
  • 30. The Third Person Effect
  • 31. Catharsis
  • 32. The Misinformation Effect
  • 33. Conformity
  • 34. Extinction Burst
  • 35. Social Loafing
  • 36. The Illusion of Transparency
  • 37. Learned Helplessness
  • 38. Embodied Cognition
  • 39. The Anchoring Effect
  • 40. Attention
  • 41. Self-Handicapping
  • 42. Self-Fulfilling Prophecies
  • 43. The Moment
  • 44. Consistency Bias
  • 45. The Representativeness Heuristic
  • 46. Expectation
  • 47. The Illusion of Control
  • 48. The Fundamental Attribution Error
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

McRaney, a Hattiesburg, Miss., resident and two-time winner of the William Randolph Hearst Award, writes simplified descriptions of psychology experiments on his blog youarenotsosmart.com. He soon found success, receiving between 17,000 to 25,000 hits a day with 6,000 subscribers to the site's RSS feed. Now McRaney's past blog posts resurface in this collection, which he describes as "a compendium of information about self-delusion and the wonderful ways we succumb to it." The format first presents "The Misconception" ("You are a strong individual who doesn't conform unless forced to") and "The Truth" ("It takes little more than an authority figure or social pressure to get you to obey, because conformity is a survival instinct"). The "Conformity" chapter describes how hoax phone calls convinced fast-food managers to strip-search employees, followed by the famous Stanley Milgram obedience experiment in which unsuspecting subjects delivered electric shocks to a screaming actor. Other brief essays cover quitting an addiction cold turkey, first impressions, behavior as a reflection of personality, blind taste tests, and self-fulfilling prophecies. In popularizing these experiments, extracted from psychology books and journals, McRaney is poised to follow in the footsteps of folklorist Jan Harold Brunvand, who also mined academic publications when he popularized urban legends in a series of books. (Nov. 1) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved