Thursday, July 17, 2008 from 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM (GMT)
With Richard Thaler, Professor of Behavioural Science and Economics, University of Chicago
Every day we make decisions on topics ranging from the personal investments we select, to the schools we pick for our children, to the foods we eat, to the causes we champion.
Richard Thaler’s new book, Nudge, co-authored by renowned legal theorist Cass Sunstein, shows that we don't always choose well – the reason being that we all are susceptible to cognitive biases and blunders that make us human, fallible, and prone to error.
However, Thaler and Sunstein urge us to recognise our “human-ness” as a given and to use the way we think to our advantage. They argue that it is possible to design environments that make it more likely for us to act in our own interests. Using colourful examples from all aspects of life, Thaler and Sunstein demonstrate how “choice architects” can structure situations to guide us toward better choices while protecting, or even expanding, our individual freedoms.
For more than 200 years, the RSA has provided platforms for leading public thinkers. That tradition lives on in our free events programme.
Our distinguished and diverse roll call of speakers has recently featured, amongst others, Kofi Annan, Wangari Maathai, Al Gore, Clay Shirky, Jeffrey Sachs and Craig Venter.
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