Irrationally rational dan ariely biography
•
Dan Ariely
Israeli-American professor of psychology and behavioral economics (born 1967)
Dan Ariely (Hebrew: דן אריאלי; born April 29, 1967) is an Israeli-American professor and author. He serves as a James B. Duke Professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University. He is the co-founder of several companies implementing insights from behavioral science.[1] Ariely wrote an advice column called "Ask Ariely" in The Wall Street Journal from June 2012 until September 2022.[2] He is the author of the three New York Times best selling books Predictably Irrational, The Upside of Irrationality, and The Honest Truth about Dishonesty.[3] He co-produced the 2015 documentary (Dis)Honesty: The Truth About Lies.[4]
In 2021, a paper with Ariely as the fourth author was discovered to be based on falsified data and was subsequently retracted.[5][6] In 2024, Duke completed a three-year confidential investig
•
Officially, I am the James B. Duke Professor of Psychology & Behavioral Economics at Duke University. inom founded the Center for Advanced Hindsight, wrote a few books, took part in a few media project and startups. inom co-created of the bio documentary (Dis)Honesty: The Truth About Lies, and inom wrote three-time New York Times bestsellers: Predictably Irrational, The Upside of irrationality, and The Honest Truth About Dishonesty. I also wrote a few books that did not man it to the New York Times bestsellers list: Irrationally Yours, Payoff, fantastisk Decisions and Dollars and Sense. My new book, MISBELIEF: WHAT MAKES logisk PEOPLE BELIEVE IRRATIONAL THINGS began with my own experience being the mål of conspiracy theories, but quickly became about a phenomenon that affects all of us. I will use the term misbelief to describe the phenomenon we’re exploring. Misbelief fryst vatten a distorted lens through which people begin to view the world, reason about the world, and then describe the worl
•
Dan Ariely- Predictably Irrational
Becoming a star in the controversial academic discipline of behavioral economics is not for the faint of heart.
Battle lines were drawn nearly four decades ago when innovative thinkers such as Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky and Richard H.Thaler challenged traditional economic dogma with their theories about the unpredictable impact of human behavior on tried-and-true economic models. Treading on the sacred ground of mainstream economics set off an intense controversy and inter- and intra-disciplinary sniping that has continued unabated ever since.
For Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business and author of the best-selling “Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions” (Harper, 2008), a little testy debate about his work pales in comparison to his own remarkable odyssey. An Israeli who was born in New York City but raised in Ramat HaSharon, a small city just north of Tel Aviv, Ariely we