Blink: The Power of Thinking without Thinking by Malcolm Gladwell

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    (Hardcover)

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    • ISBN: 0316172324
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Pub. Date: January 2005
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    Synopsis

    In this best-seller, a staff writer for The New Yorker weighs the factors that determine good decision-making. Drawing on recent cognitive research, Gladwell concludes that those who quickly filter out extraneous information generally make better decisions than those who discount their first impressions. The author of The Tipping Point (2000) cites the implications for such areas as emergency situations and marketing, plus some notable exceptions. Annotation ©2005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

    The Washington Post - Howard Gardner

    In Blink, Malcolm Gladwell, a former science and business reporter at The Washington Post who now writes for the New Yorker, offers his account of this sort of seemingly instantaneous judgment. Readers acquainted with Gladwell's articles and his 2000 bestseller The Tipping Point will have high anticipations for this volume; those expectations will be met. The book features the fascinating case studies, skilled interweavings of psychological experiments and explanations and unexpected connections among disparate phenomenon that are Gladwell's impressive trademark.

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    Biography

    Malcolm Gladwell is a staff writer for The New Yorker. He was formerly a business and science reporter at the Washington Post.

    Customer Reviews

    Another Compelling Book from Gladwellby Anonymous

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    12/02/2009: I must state up front that I am a huge fan of Gladwell's works. They are thoroughly researched and cutting edge yet they read like novels. I learned a lot from reading Blink about how I view things and my initial perceptions. I believe my filter is much stronger as a result. Ultimately, I find Gladwell's books to be self improvement tools in that they force me to think about things in a whole new way.

    Not So Convinced This Timeby Book_Maven_Reviews

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    03/11/2009: Gladwell again unleashes a book that, if it does nothing else, makes you think about a subject you might have never thought to think about. Although Gladwell uses the term "thin slicing" to describe the phenomenon of knowing something without knowing it, it would seem the word "intuition" might be more common-or "hunch."

    Gladwell argues that there is a way to know deeper truth about a thing from an instant glance sometimes than to fully analyze it. In one example concerning a statue purchased by the Getty Museum in Los Angeles for $10M, scientists and archaeologists studied the statue thoroughly to verify it's authenticity. The museum made the purchase, then another expert on these particular statues took one look and determined it was a fake. Other experts followed. Later it was indeed proven to be a fake. It was aged artificially using milk of all things. When asked how they determined it was fake, the experts sited negative feelings, hunches, something too perfect, etc. Gladwell uses instance after instance of such feelings to illumine the human mind's capacity to make snap judgments that are truer than those developed after long consideration.

    Problem one Gladwell addresses: prejudice. The snap judgments that are the backbone of racism and injustice in much of our world. He uses the fatal police shooting of Amadou Diallo in New York as an example of such "thin slice" thinking gone awry. Gladwell does a decent job of warning against the possibility of misusing these more base mental powers.

    Problem two, however, Gladwell misses. He says nothing to us at all about how to perfect these abilities or train them or how to determine if they can be trusted at all. Rather he simply illumines that they exist and that we humans use them all the time. Well, isn't that wonderfully trivial? "Humans have this ability to know without knowing. Here are examples."

    "And?"

    "And. nothing. I just thought you should know." That's the feeling I'm left with at the end of the book. Perhaps because he writes for the New Yorker, Gladwell is used to such open ended topics as great fodder for dinner conversations. Perhaps these stories are written for the day you land on "Who Wants to be a Millionaire." Or perhaps Gladwell just wants to make us think-or maybe not think so much-as it could be that he is arguing for less thought and more knowing without thinking. I'm not sure that's a good thing. Usually jumping to conclusions before you know something is negative. Blink is basically an argument that sometimes people jump to conclusions and they are right. No doubt everyone thinks they're right at the time they jump. If Gladwell isn't going to help us train this capacity, we might do better to keep thinking first.


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