Nudge — Internalisation of small (but significant) facts

Ian Glendinning @Psybertron
1 min readSep 11, 2017

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Just a bookmarking post.

Hat-tip to @anitaleirfall for posting this link to Daniel Kahnemann’s “retraction” of underpowered statistical significance data in his Thinking Fast and Slow based on his earlier work with Amos Tversky.

Noted previously that super-statistician Taleb had profound effect on Kahnemann.

Kahnemann’s work is behind “Nudge”.

Taleb had been involved with Nudge with UK as well as US governments (The David Cameron story?). AND Taleb had indicated the problem with Nudge when, as so often, the wrong or false facts were used as the basis of Nudge, or unintended consequences resulted.

Does the technical error — which changes the significance of the facts — actually change the implied / accepted reality, prove it wrong or simply leave it unproven?

Many meta-meta-levels in this …. me internalising Kahnemann’s error — doing so correctly — making the right Kahnemann / Taleb / Nudge inference(s) — and the question of how significant these might be … as Nudges. (There’s a lot in Thinking Fast and Slow — not all dependent of the error.)

Originally published at Psybertron Asks.

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Ian Glendinning @Psybertron

Blogging since 2001 primarily via Wordpress on www.psybertron.org asking What, why and how do we know? A rationalist keeping science & humanism honest.