ABSTRACT

Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman’s 1974 paper ‘Judgement Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases’ is a landmark in the history of psychology. Though a mere seven pages long, it has helped reshape the study of human rationality, and had a particular impact on economics – where Tversky and Kahneman’s work helped shape the entirely new sub discipline of ‘behavioral economics.’

The paper investigates human decision-making, specifically what human brains tend to do when we are forced to deal with uncertainty or complexity. Based on experiments carried out with volunteers, Tversky and Kahneman discovered that humans make predictable errors of judgement when forced to deal with ambiguous evidence or make challenging decisions. These errors stem from ‘heuristics’ and ‘biases’ – mental shortcuts and assumptions that allow us to make swift, automatic decisions, often usefully and correctly, but occasionally to our detriment.

The paper’s huge influence is due in no small part to its masterful use of high-level interpretative and analytical skills – expressed in Tversky and Kahneman’s concise and clear definitions of the basic heuristics and biases they discovered. Still providing the foundations of new work in the field 40 years later, the two psychologists’ definitions are a model of how good interpretation underpins incisive critical thinking.

chapter |5 pages

Ways in to the Text

section 1|19 pages

Influences

chapter |5 pages

Module 2: Academic Context

chapter |4 pages

Module 3: The Problem

chapter |4 pages

Module 4: The Authors’ Contribution

section 2|18 pages

Ideas

chapter |4 pages

Module 5: Main Ideas

chapter |4 pages

Module 6: Secondary Ideas

chapter |5 pages

Module 7: Achievement

chapter |4 pages

Module 8: Place in the Authors’ Work

section 3|19 pages

Impact

chapter |5 pages

Module 9: The First Responses

chapter |5 pages

Module 10: The Evolving Debate

chapter |4 pages

Module 11: Impact and Influence Today

chapter |4 pages

Module 12: Where Next?