Daniel Kahneman is a Nobel Prize winner who transformed our understanding of the biases that cloud our thinking. In this conversation, he and Adam explore when to trust our intuition and when to second-guess it. Danny explains how he finds joy in being wrong, spells out steps to smarter interviewing, and reveals how he—the master decoder of decision-making—makes decisions. Find the transcript for this episode at go.ted.com/RT-Kahneman
Kara Swisher on speaking truth to power
Anne Lamott's thoughts on love, writing, and being judgy
How to make the most of your twenties with Meg Jay
Yuval Noah Harari on what history teaches us about justice and peace
The science of memory with Charan Ranganath
Understanding the pendulum swing of global power with Ian Bremmer
will.i.am on AI — and the future of creativity
How to be productive without burning out, with Cal Newport
Is your organization a little culty? with NXIVM whistleblower Sarah Edmondson
Redefining hustle culture with Robin Arzón
Revising the stories we hold dear with Denise Hamilton
Power, purpose, and the American presidency with Jared Cohen
How to become a "friction-fixer" with Bob Sutton
Overcoming toxic positivity with Susan David
You have more control over your emotions than you think with Lisa Feldman Barrett
Jennifer Garner realizes her hidden potential
Bringing out the good in kids —and parents— with Becky Kennedy (Re-release)
Chess grandmaster Maurice Ashley on why mistakes are our greatest teachers
Your brain on art with Ivy Ross and Susan Magsamen
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The emPOWERed Half Hour
Hidden Brain
How To Own The Room
Something In Media
Fixable
Squiggly Careers