en

Dan Ariely

  • D_readerhas quotedlast year
    humans rarely choose things in absolute terms.
  • D_readerhas quotedlast year
    people don’t know what they want unless they see it in context.
  • D_readerhas quotedlast year
    Understand that relativity is everywhere, and that we view everything through its lens—rose-colored or otherwise. When you meet someone in a different country or city and it seems that you have a magical connection, realize that the enchantment might be limited to the surrounding circumstances. This realization might prevent you from subsequent disenchantment.
  • D_readerhas quotedlast year
    “Tom had discovered a great law of human action, namely, that in order to make a man covet a thing, it is only necessary to make the thing difficult to attain.”
  • utiutshas quoted2 years ago
    On another technology platform for only one day—because it was quickly taken down—there was an iPhone app for sale called “I Am Rich.” It simply displayed a few words of affirmation about being rich. It did nothing else. It cost $999.99. Eight people bought it.
  • utiutshas quoted2 years ago
    When it comes to making financial decisions, what should matter are opportunity costs, the true benefit a purchase provides, and the real pleasure we receive from it compared to other ways we could spend our money.
  • utiutshas quoted2 years ago
    One study found that people discounted the future less when it was described with a specific calendar date rather than as an amount of time. We are more likely to save for a retirement that happens on “October 18, 2037” than for one that happens “in twenty years.” That simple change makes the future more vivid, concrete, real, and relatable.3
  • utiutshas quoted2 years ago
    This person, this “future me,” should be cared for.
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