If you’re like most people, you would rather take the safe $500 in scenario 1, but the gamble in scenario 2. Yet the odds of ending up at $1,000, $1,500 or $2,000 are the exact same in both.
The reason has to do with loss aversion. We’re a lot more afraid to lose what we already have, as we are keen on getting more .
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Thinking Fast And Slow - Book Summary
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We make decisions based on the information that we have. However, we tend to be more reliant on the negative more than the positive. This causes two outcomes:
Risk aversion – where we prefer an assured outcome over a gamble with a higher expected outcome; and
...Certain regions in our brain—which evoke strong emotions and improve concentration—are more active when we listen to familiar rather than unfamiliar music.
Plus, when we listen to unfamiliar music we’re more likely to lose focus, while adjusting to the new sound.
We all have loss aversion, preferring to avoid losses even with the opportunity cost of gaining profits. Losing money, in fact, is a necessary rite of passage that most are not okay with.
The best investors are the ones losing money, but who are smart enough to never lose more than 10 per...
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