How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics Quotes

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How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics by Cass R. Sunstein
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“Our favorite messengers are sometimes wrong and our least favorite messengers are sometimes right.”
Cass R. Sunstein, How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics
“They suggest that with respect to facts, partisan differences are much less sharp than they seem—and that political polarization is often an artifact of the survey setting.”
Cass R. Sunstein, How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics
“Social scientists emphasize that people use the “availability heuristic,” which means that we assess risks by asking whether a bad (or good) event is cognitively “available.” It”
Cass R. Sunstein, How to Humble a Wingnut and Other Lessons from Behavioral Economics