Best Mental Models: 30 Thinking Tools that Separate the Average From the Exceptional. Improved Decision-Making, Logical Analysis, and Problem-Solving. By Peter Hollins

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Mental Models: 30 Thinking Tools that Separate the Average From the Exceptional. Improved Decision-Making, Logical Analysis, and Problem-Solving.-Peter Hollins

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30 Practical and applicable guidelines to think smarter, faster, and with expert insight (even if you aren’t one).Mental models are like giving a treasure map to someone lost in the woods. They provide instant understanding, context, and most importantly, a path to the end destination. Now imagine having such a map for all problems and decisions in your life.Battle information overwhelm, focus on what really matters, and make complex decisions with speed and confidence. Mental Models: 30 Thinking Tools sheds light on true intelligence: it’s not about knowledge and knowing the capitals of all the countries in the world. It’s about how you think, and each mental model is a specific framework on how to think smart and with insight. You can approach the world by trying to analyze each piece of information separately, or you can learn mental models that do the work for you.Learn how billionaires/CEOs, Olympic athletes, and scientists think differently and avoid mistakes.Peter Hollins has studied psychology and peak human performance for over a dozen years and is a bestselling author. He has worked with a multitude of individuals to unlock their potential and path towards success. His writing draws on his academic, coaching, and research experience.The person with a hammer only sees nails. Become the person with a hammer, saw, sander, drill, screwdriver, and axe.•How to balance information and action without sacrificing speed - MM #3 and #5.•Understanding what data is really telling you - MM #8 and #10.•Charles Darwin’s secret to clear and honest thinking - MM #11.Mental models for all walks of life: productivity, professional success, greater happiness, critical thinking, and decision-making.•Understanding correlation, causation, root causation, and proximate causation - MM #15 and #16.•Implementing anti-goals to find real priorities and focus - MM #19 and #23.•Being able to predict the future with basic probabilistic thinking - MM #10 and #25.•How to strategically allocate your time and resources for biggest impact - MM #27 and #30.Think in models and always be a step ahead. Scroll up and click the BUY NOW BUTTON to become exceptional.This book is the first book in the “Mental Models for Better Living” series as listed below:-Book 1: Mental Models: 30 Thinking Tools that Separate the Average From the Exceptional. Improved Decision-Making, Logical Analysis, and Problem-Solving.-Book 2: Mental Models: 16 Versatile Thinking Tools for Complex Situations: Better Decisions, Clearer Thinking, and Greater Self-Awareness-Book 3: The Art of Intentional Thinking: Master Your Mindset. Control and Choose Your Thoughts. Create Mental Habits to Fulfill Your Potential (Second Edition)-Book 4: Think With Intention: Reprogram Your Mindset, Perspectives, and Thoughts. Control Your Fate and Unlock Your Potential.

Book Mental Models: 30 Thinking Tools that Separate the Average From the Exceptional. Improved Decision-Making, Logical Analysis, and Problem-Solving. Review :



This is more interesting than other Hollins' productions I've bought (and didn't like -- they've been removed from the marketplace.)At least the sentences are a little bit more interesting... but at times truly bizarre. (Talking about what reversible decisions are ,comparing them, a non-reversible decision is "shaving your cat"... say what? I'm wondering if this wasn't spun from "skinning a cat.") At times the adjectives seem like someone went thru and randomly used something to replace one adjective with a similar one -- but not one I would assume a native English speaker would ever use.Some of the content -- which seemed, at times, gratuitously added to fatten the ebook -- seemed like it was spun from other content.What I like best -- the summaries at the end of the chapters of the mental models.Seems like "mental models" are the topic du jour... as there are at least two other books coming out about it (with some of them starting from a similar place -- a 1994 Commencement Speech at USC by Warren Buffett's well-regarded partner, Charlie Munger) -- and another one by another prolific author in the personal development space.After having gone thru the summaries and then gone back if the summaries weren't sufficient to provide clarity, there were some things which were just plain wrong... or incomplete.The first is the one which I mention in the headline. Confirmation bias is talked about as if it's a conscious choice. It's not. You can know all you want about conbias and it's not going to stop you from doing it. It's hard to even see it in yourself,, and it takes quite a bit of humility to even begin to see a bit of it. (Which is why political discussions tend to go off the rail.)Confirmation bias is part of the human condition. It's as much a part of us as our visual blindspots. It serves self-protective functions in the psyche -- very strong ones at that.Okay, so that's #1.#2 -- Kahneman's System #2 thinking. Anyone who represented system #2 thinking in such an incomplete way has NEVER read Kahneman. While system #2 is more thoughtful, it, too, has shortcomings. (UGH!).I doubt Kahneman would recognize the descriptions of system #1 and system #2 from the description in this book. They are that far off, dumbed down and trivialized.I'm of mixed feelings about this. The summaries are helpful. The summary of all of the models at the end are just about all you need. There's so much unnecessary fat in this book (which is amusing, in a very cynical way; that is -- in wondering how these sentences or analogies were come up with. But you may not have the same curiosity I have in reverse engineering how people create stuff, like I do.)This MIGHT even be worth $3.99 to you. The Charlie Munger premise is a good one. Whether this is the best place to acquire additional mental models (many of which you've probably already heard) is questionable.If this is a topic of interest to you, google around a bit, look at other book descriptions, check out wikipedia.And if you're really up to it -- read Kahneman's "Thinking Fast and Slow." There's so much there to chew on, which goes far beyond the system 1 and system 2 thinking... it's well worth the read. It's probably one of the most profound books I've read (which I did back in 2014).You will learn a lot more about clear thinking, and how we humans get distorted views of the world, than probably any collection of mental models will give you.Updated: while doing some research on other topics, I see the book by Shane Parrish will cover 109 mental models ... and you can actually find the list on his blog at fs dot blog. Some with articles (if I had to guess... more than 30.)While mental models are indeed powerful, one of the things to recognize is that models DELETE information. It's important to recognize both the strengths and weaknesses of models (which this book does not do.) Some models are going to work better in some knowledge domains better than others.More models is just a scratch into the surface of thinking and making better decisions. Without the wisdom that comes from weaknesses and strengths, they can lead you in the wrong direction if used incorrectly.
This book draws on a very big, powerful, and important conceptual assumption that I have found invaluable. That is the concept that we can and should envision thinking in terms of using representations (such as models and rules) to organize our ideas, focus our attention, and help explain our actions. This aligns very well with the pragmatist philosophy of education in terms of learning to think by using concepts more effectively as tools and with the psychological research into the use of models in terms of “mindware” that helps us think more effectively. The idea of extracting the best mental models from the various disciplines and learning to adopt them skillfully and appropriately to our own thinking is a particularly promising one that I agree with strongly. The book starts out very strong with an excerpt from Charlie Munger’s inspiring famous speech about mental models.That’s why I was so dismally disappointed by this truly awful book. Not badly written, just very badly researched. It is so full of misunderstandings, misrepresentations, and misconceptions of the models it describes that I found myself struggling just to get through it even though I was excited by the theme of the book. It reads as if the examples and descriptions were drawn from skimming random web pages rather than reading the books that describe the models and examples in depth.Sure, I realize that we’re often trying to generalize here from a specific discipline to a template we can apply more broadly, we’re not trying to master the disciplines these models are drawn from. And arguably the book may succeed in doing that sometimes. But the explanations of the models frequently use examples that don’t even make sense in light of the way the models are used in their original disciplines. That’s not promising. The author uses the example of a mode to illustrate regression toward the mean, which doesn’t work in many cases, making it a particularly bad example. He admits to not understanding much math, as if that’s a good thing for writing a book about models, but that’s not the problem. It’s the ability to explain the models to other people that is important here. And that’s what is done so poorly. Unfortunately the problem isn’t limited to just math. Using the story of the black swans to try to make a point about the value of drawing on statistical likelihood is another example of a bizarrely inappropriate literary device the author relies on. The story has generally been used to make the opposite point, in particular by Taleb whom he cites regarding the idea. Taleb’s point is that what we see most of the time is not necessarily what we should always expect, making this a particularly confusing choice for explaining how the models of statistical distributions should be used to help us understand the likelihood of events.These are not exceptions, the book is full of examples that seem to have been drawn at random by skimming web articles about popular books without actually reading those books. If the purpose was to illustrate that someone who doesn’t do the homework can still manage to explain models they only superficially understand, it may succeed at that aspiration. But I’m concerned that actually learning to use these models for more than trivial problem solving and decision making might take a better understanding of them than this book provides. It isn’t a bad list of models, although it seems somewhat arbitrary in places, it’s mostly the explanations of the models that I found weak, superficial, and confusing. I strongly recommend the concept the book is based upon but I’d be surprised if most people learned much about actually using these mental models from reading this book, except perhaps by accident in some cases. It isn’t hard to find good books about mental models I can recommend instead because they give a better sense of the models themselves. These would include for a start Twenty Thinking Tools by Phillip Cam which focuses particularly on fundamental tools for reasoning together, The Philosopher’s Toolkit by Julian Baggini which focuses on the tools for analysis of ideas, Mindware by Richard Nisbett, and Foresman’s Critical Thinking Toolkit.

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