Decision-making
Sorites Paradox
Understanding how components of a situation relate can lead to better decision-making.
The Ship of Theseus
Understanding how components of a situation relate can lead to better decision-making.
Plutchik's Wheel
Identify the emotions influencing your decision-making, enabling you to make more rational choices.
Maslow's Hammer
Considering diverse decision-making techniques, like pros and cons lists or SWOT analysis, instead of always following intuition.
Hilbert's Paradox of the Grand Hotel
Topic: Deep understanding of infinity and its types - Considering the long-term and potentially infinite consequences of choices, and making more informed decisions.
Eisenhower Matrix
Evaluating choices based on their urgency and importance to make well-informed decisions.
Birthday Paradox
Topic: Deep probability Understanding - Apply the principles of probability to make better-informed decisions in everyday situations, such as evaluating risk or comparing options.
Ikigai
Applying the concept of Ikigai can help you make more informed decisions by considering how various options align with your values, skills, and passions.
Clustering Bias/Illusion
In general, knowing clustering bias can help you make more rational decisions in various aspects of your life by avoiding the assumption that patterns exist in random or unrelated events.
Ikea Effect
Recognize the potential for the Ikea Effect to influence your choices, and strive for objective evaluations.
The Barber Paradox
Applying logical principles to weigh options and make better choices.
Breadth-First Search
Comparing all options at the same level of priority before narrowing down.
Pareto Principle
Concentrating on the most critical factors that contribute to the majority of the desired outcomes.
Occam's Razor
Weighing pros and cons can be more helpful than overanalyzing every possible outcome.
Similar Situations
Belbin's Nine Team Roles
Making a Critical Decision Under Pressure: Shaper drives the decision-making process quickly, and Monitor Evaluator carefully considers all options before making the final call.
Asch Experiment
Decision Making: Recognizing the influence of group pressure and making more informed, independent choices.
Confirmation Bias
Medical decision-making: Recognizing confirmation bias can help you avoid relying solely on anecdotal evidence or personal beliefs when making health-related decisions.
Monty Hall Problem
Decision-making under uncertainty: (Topic: Deep probability Understanding) Weighing the potential outcomes and their probabilities when making decisions with incomplete information.
The Barber Paradox
Ethical decision-making: Analyzing moral dilemmas and making reasoned choices based on ethical principles.
Big Five Personality Traits
Risk Assessment: Recognizing personality traits associated with risk-taking can inform decision-making in situations such as financial investments or adventurous activities.
Wardley Map
Change Management: Guiding organizational changes through informed decision-making.
Skinner's Superstition Experiment
Home-buying decisions: Use rational decision-making processes, and avoid superstitions related to house numbers, colors, or other factors.
Loss Aversion
Financial decisions: Understanding loss aversion can help you make more rational investment choices and avoid emotional decision-making based on potential losses.
SWOT Analysis
Parenting Decision-Making: Parents can use SWOT analysis to make informed decisions about their children's education, extracurricular activities, and health, considering the family's strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and potential threats.