Home > Work > How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics
1 " Our favorite messengers are sometimes wrong and our least favorite messengers are sometimes right. "
― Cass R. Sunstein , How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics
2 " They suggest that with respect to facts, partisan differences are much less sharp than they seem—and that political polarization is often an artifact of the survey setting. "
3 " Social scientists emphasize that people use the “availability heuristic,” which means that we assess risks by asking whether a bad (or good) event is cognitively “available.” It "