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Charlotte Pierce

Daniel Kahneman: The riddle of experience vs. memory | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    Using examples from vacations to colonoscopies, Nobel laureate and founder of behavioral economics Daniel Kahneman reveals how our "experiencing selves" and our "remembering selves" perceive happiness differently. This new insight has profound implications for economics, public policy -- and our own self-awareness. Widely regarded as the world's most influential living psychologist, Daniel Kahneman won the Nobel in Economics for his pioneering work in behavioral economics -- exploring the irrational ways we make decisions about risk. 
Lisa Tansey

James B. Glattfelder: Who controls the world? | Video on TED.com - 1 views

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    Glattfelder follows the chain of transnational corporate ownership to determine "who controls the world" economically-speaking.  I.e., our economic commons. He defines the rather tight network of control as an emergent property rather than some global conspiracy.
Charlotte Pierce

GEO 9 - Collective Action: Research, Practice and Theory | Grassroots Economic Organizing - 0 views

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    Most of GEO's readers are practitioners of economic collective action. They may be wondering why GEO is dedicating an entire issue not only to the practice of, but the theory and research of collective action as well.
Lisa Tansey

Game theory and Nash equilibrium | Microeconomics | Khan Academy - 0 views

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    "Microeconomics Community Questions TOPICS Supply, demand and market equilibrium Elasticity Consumer and producer surplus Scarcity, possibilities, preferences and opportunity cost Production decisions and economic profit Forms of competition Game theory and Nash equilibrium"
Charlotte Pierce

Kevin Kelly -- Out of Control - 1 views

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    In his book "Out of Control: The New Biology of Machines, Social Systems, and the Economic World" Kevin Kelly has a chapter titled "Hive Mind."  Here is one of my favorite parts of that chapter: "For many years Mark Thompson, a beekeeper local to my area, had the bizarre urge to build a Live-In Hive -- an active bee home you could visit by inserting your head into it. He was working in a yard once when a beehive spewed a swarm of bees "like a flow of black lava, dissolving, then taking wing." The black cloud coalesced into a 20-foot-round black halo of 30,000 bees that hovered, UFO-like, six feet off the ground, exactly at eye level. The flickering insect halo began to drift slowly away, keeping a constant six feet above the earth. It was a Live-In Hive dream come true.
Charlotte Pierce

Thinking, Fast and Slow - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Thinking, Fast and Slow is a 2011 book by Nobel Memorial Prize winner in Economics Daniel Kahneman which summarizes research that he conducted over decades, often in collaboration with Amos Tversky.[1][2] It covers all three phases of his career: his early days working on cognitive bias, his work on prospect theory, and his later work on happiness.
Charlotte Pierce

The Penguin and the Leviathan: The Triumph of Cooperation Over Self-Interest - P2P Foun... - 0 views

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    Here's a quit extensive synthesis of  "The Penguin and the Leviathan," in my opinion a wonderful book for anyone who is interested in improving and transforming our economic and political institutions.   Human motivation is a subject that 'makes me tick'. I really enjoyed reading "The Penguin and the Leviathan", not only because it paints a much nicer picture of "human nature" than the one used by the free marketeers, but also because it gives a glimpse of a future, higher form of society that will be much more based on human cooperation. I think it is important to see that the seeds of this future society are very much present today.
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