Think like a freak: Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner

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Think like a freak: Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner

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[...]... weapons of mass destruction and was in league with al Qaeda To be sure, there was more to it than that—politics, oil, and perhaps revenge—but it was the al Qaeda and weapons claims that sealed the deal Eight years, $800 billion, and nearly 4,500 American deaths later—along with at least 100,000 Iraqi fatalities—it was tempting to consider what might have happened had the purveyors of those claims admitted... he showed up anyway and, in the excitement, jumped onstage He was promptly handcuffed and arrested It was an uncharacteristically brash move for such a disciplined man That night in jail, he was given a sandwich and milk “I am very hungry,” he said “I wish there were hot dogs in jail.” Can the success of Takeru Kobayashi, as magnificent as it was, be applied to anything more significant than the high-speed... like a Freak means you should work terribly hard to identify and attack the root cause of problems Of course this is far more easily said than done Consider poverty and famine: What causes them? A glib answer is the lack of money and food So theoretically you can fight poverty and famine by airlifting vast amounts of money and food into poor and hungry places That is pretty much what governments and aid... experiment and gather the feedback that changed the game Only by redefining the problem was he able to discover a new set of solutions Kobayashi came to view competitive eating as a fundamentally different activity than everyday eating He saw it as a sport a disgusting one, perhaps, at least to most people—but, as with any sport, it required specific training, strategy, and physical and mental maneuvers... pizzas and a six-pack at one sitting Kobayashi, meanwhile, was softspoken, playful, and analytical He became an international superstar In Japan, the enthusiasm for eating contests cooled after a schoolboy choked to death imitating his heroes But Kobayashi found plenty of competition elsewhere, setting records in hamburgers, bratwurst, Twinkies, lobster rolls, fish tacos, and more A rare defeat came... it dates to our distant past In the caveman era, it was a matter of life or death to know if the berries on a particular bush were edible The proximate cause was usually the one that mattered Even today, the most proximate cause often makes perfect sense If your three-year-old child is wailing and your five-year-old is standing nearby with a devilish grin and a plastic hammer, it’s a good bet the hammer... children, and find yourself blurting out that child car seats are a waste of time and money (at least that’s what the crash-test data say) Or, at a holiday dinner with your new girlfriend’s family, you blather on about how the local-food movement can actually hurt the environment—only to learn that her father is a hard-core locavore, and everything on the table was grown within fifty miles You’ll have to... for his first Coney Island competition Those months in isolation, it turned out, were one long bout of experimentation and feedback Kobayashi had observed that most Coney Island eaters used a similar strategy, which was not really much of a strategy at all It was essentially a sped-up version of how the average person eats a hot dog at a backyard barbecue: pick it up, cram the dog and bun into the mouth,... “I can keep going,” Kobi said CHAPTER 4 Like a Bad Dye Job, the Truth Is in the Roots It takes a truly original thinker to look at a problem that everyone else has already looked at and find a new avenue of attack Why is this so rare? Perhaps because most of us, when trying to figure out a problem, gravitate toward the nearest and most obvious cause It’s hard to say whether this is learned behavior... for all his methodological innovation, was simply an anatomical freak, a once-in -a- lifetime eating machine? The best evidence against this argument is that his competition began to catch up with him After six years of domination at Coney Island, Kobayashi was overtaken by the American eater Joey “Jaws” Chestnut, who went on to win seven straight Coney Island contests as of this writing Often, he beat . leave David Cameron’s face, but it did leave his eyes. Maybe our story hadn’t come out as we d intended. Or maybe it did, and that was the problem. In any case, he offered a quick handshake and. for all. And then Saturday dawned bright and clear, the world still in one piece. The boy, with the false bravado of a ten-year-old, declared he d never been scared at all. “Even so,” his father. destruction and was in league with al Qaeda. To be sure, there was more to it than that—politics, oil, and perhaps revenge—but it was the al Qaeda and weapons claims that sealed the deal. Eight years,

Ngày đăng: 05/06/2014, 05:28

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Mục lục

  • Dedication

  • 1. What Does It Mean to Think Like a Freak?

  • 2. The Three Hardest Words in the English Language

  • 3. What’s Your Problem?

  • 4. Like a Bad Dye Job, the Truth Is in the Roots

  • 5. Think Like a Child

  • 6. Like Giving Candy to a Baby

  • 7. What Do King Solomon and David Lee Roth Have in Common?

  • 8. How to Persuade People Who Don’t Want to Be Persuaded

  • 9. The Upside of Quitting

  • Acknowledgments

  • Notes

  • Index

  • About the Authors

  • Also by Steven D. Levitt & Stephen J. Dubner

  • Credits

  • Copyright

  • About the Publisher

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