BLINK- SUMMARY The Blink thesis can be summarised thus: * Split-second decisions can be far more accurate than drawn-out‚ deliberate‚ “rational”‚ decisions. * However‚ split-second decisions can also be heavily flawed. * Interventions can be made to help people harness the power of split-second decisions. EVIDENCE OF SPLIT-SECOND DECISIONS OVER DELIBERATE DECISIONS * Experiment subjects quickly started following the profitable strategy in a card game‚ but could not explain why until much later
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Hailey Caroen Mrs. Schmitt Literary Analysis and Composition 15 October 2014 My Ultimate Success “Even the woodpecker owes his success to the fact that he uses his head and keeps pecking away until he finishes the job he starts.” These words from Coleman Cox explain how success can be measured by the time and effort you put into it. Cox’s words here relate to my belief that getting a head start on the career you strive for is important and should always be taken into thought and consideration. When
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The Triple Package of Traits = Success? Success was something that everyone strove for worldwide‚ but there have been controversies and questions about how to achieve it. This is what Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld argue in their article‚ “What Drives Success?”. The authors argue that there were three things needed to succeed: a superiority complex‚ insecurity‚ and impulse control. The article goes over the success prevalent in those of many family backgrounds. Those that achieve success do not come
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inventions have ran their course‚ or which inventions are still in their peak. Throughout the book‚ The Tipping Point‚ Malcolm Gladwell elaborated to the audience that there are three main concepts on how products‚ behaviors‚ ideas‚ and messages can spread within a society. The three main ideas are The Power of Context‚ The Stickiness Factor‚ and The Law of the Few. According to Gladwell‚ The Power of Context concludes the environment circumstances which are important for a movement to reach its tipping point
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opportunities it becomes possible for a few lucky people. Malcolm Gladwell argues that anyone can become an expert with enough opportunities and drive. Gladwell uses examples such as The Beatles‚ Bill Gates‚ and even John D. Rockefeller to establish that being at the right place at the right time can be the difference between being a billionaire and just making ends meet. In the chapter “The 10‚000-Hour Rule” by Malcolm Gladwell‚ the author ineffectively argues that after 10‚000 hours of practice
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When we think of ten thousand hours our first thought is probably like whoa‚ that is a lot of time. Right? Ten thousand hours‚ to put it in an easier perspective is equivalent to around four hundred and seventeen days which is a lot of time to do one thing and that is 24/7. Now imagine putting in ten thousand hours into one field of work. An average work day for someone who is a teenager to young adult is around 5 hours because they still have to go to school as well. If he or she worked five hours
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Therefore‚ splitting is not subject to compromisation. Malcolm Gladwell implies this concept of splitting in The Power of Context by elucidating that one’s immediate environment clouds decision-making processes. Gladwell’s position on the matter is antithetical to Bell’s‚ and provides a different description of this
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majority of society‚ this is the case. I correlate this to having abundance or too much in one area as opposed to moderation or equality in any regard will result in a lack of interest or no appreciation for the subject‚ item‚ or thing. Second‚ Gladwells theory in David and Goliath‚ chapter 2‚ of how the inverted u curve applies to life was illustrated well when he explains the effects that the man from Hollywood experienced when he realized he was on the extreme right of the curve earning too much
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Gladwell argues that “opportunity in higher education is based on a faulty assumption about poverty.” He gives a clear example of Carlos‚ a gifted student who grew up in poverty‚ but was led to exceptional schools because he was lucky and was recruited into a program for low income students. This program brings talented lower class students to elite schools so they can advance in life. It is unfortunate that just because one is born into a lower income family‚ they cannot afford a quality education
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Chapter 2 is called "The 10‚000-Hour Rule"‚ which refers to the claim that to become expert at anything a person must spend 10‚000 hours at it. Gladwell begins by describing the success of a computer programmer named Bill Joy. Joy comes to the University of Michigan as a teenager in 1971 and finds his way to the new computing center that opens there the same year. He becomes a well-known programer famous for his quick ability and skill. After graduate school he co-founds Sun Microsystems and helps
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