Why we make bad decisions | Dan Gilbert

1,901,604 views ・ 2008-12-17

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:18
We all make decisions every day; we want to know
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what the right thing is to do -- in domains from the financial
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to the gastronomic to the professional to the romantic.
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And surely, if somebody could really tell us how to do
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exactly the right thing at all possible times,
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that would be a tremendous gift.
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It turns out that, in fact, the world was given this gift in 1738
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by a Dutch polymath named Daniel Bernoulli.
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And what I want to talk to you about today is what that gift is,
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and I also want to explain to you why it is
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that it hasn't made a damn bit of difference.
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Now, this is Bernoulli's gift. This is a direct quote.
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And if it looks like Greek to you, it's because, well, it's Greek.
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But the simple English translation -- much less precise,
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but it captures the gist of what Bernoulli had to say -- was this:
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The expected value of any of our actions --
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that is, the goodness that we can count on getting --
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is the product of two simple things:
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the odds that this action will allow us to gain something,
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and the value of that gain to us.
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In a sense, what Bernoulli was saying is,
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if we can estimate and multiply these two things,
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we will always know precisely how we should behave.
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Now, this simple equation, even for those of you
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who don't like equations, is something that you're quite used to.
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Here's an example: if I were to tell you, let's play
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a little coin toss game, and I'm going to flip a coin,
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and if it comes up heads, I'm going to pay you 10 dollars,
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but you have to pay four dollars for the privilege of playing with me,
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most of you would say, sure, I'll take that bet. Because you know
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that the odds of you winning are one half, the gain if you do is 10 dollars,
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that multiplies to five, and that's more
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than I'm charging you to play. So, the answer is, yes.
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This is what statisticians technically call a damn fine bet.
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Now, the idea is simple when we're applying it to coin tosses,
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but in fact, it's not very simple in everyday life.
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People are horrible at estimating both of these things,
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and that's what I want to talk to you about today.
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There are two kinds of errors people make when trying to decide
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what the right thing is to do, and those are
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errors in estimating the odds that they're going to succeed,
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and errors in estimating the value of their own success.
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Now, let me talk about the first one first.
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Calculating odds would seem to be something rather easy:
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there are six sides to a die, two sides to a coin, 52 cards in a deck.
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You all know what the likelihood is of pulling the ace of spades
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or of flipping a heads.
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But as it turns out, this is not a very easy idea to apply
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in everyday life. That's why Americans spend more --
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I should say, lose more -- gambling
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than on all other forms of entertainment combined.
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The reason is, this isn't how people do odds.
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The way people figure odds
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requires that we first talk a bit about pigs.
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Now, the question I'm going to put to you is whether you think
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there are more dogs or pigs on leashes
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observed in any particular day in Oxford.
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And of course, you all know that the answer is dogs.
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And the way that you know that the answer is dogs is
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you quickly reviewed in memory the times
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you've seen dogs and pigs on leashes.
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It was very easy to remember seeing dogs,
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not so easy to remember pigs. And each one of you assumed
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that if dogs on leashes came more quickly to your mind,
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then dogs on leashes are more probable.
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That's not a bad rule of thumb, except when it is.
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So, for example, here's a word puzzle.
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Are there more four-letter English words
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with R in the third place or R in the first place?
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Well, you check memory very briefly, make a quick scan,
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and it's awfully easy to say to yourself, Ring, Rang, Rung,
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and very hard to say to yourself, Pare, Park: they come more slowly.
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But in fact, there are many more words in the English language
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with R in the third than the first place.
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The reason words with R in the third place come slowly to your mind
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isn't because they're improbable, unlikely or infrequent.
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It's because the mind recalls words by their first letter.
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You kind of shout out the sound, S -- and the word comes.
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It's like the dictionary;
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it's hard to look things up by the third letter.
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So, this is an example of how this idea that
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the quickness with which things come to mind
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can give you a sense of their probability --
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how this idea could lead you astray. It's not just puzzles, though.
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For example, when Americans are asked to estimate the odds
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that they will die in a variety of interesting ways --
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these are estimates of number of deaths per year
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per 200 million U.S. citizens.
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And these are just ordinary people like yourselves who are asked
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to guess how many people die from tornado, fireworks, asthma, drowning, etc.
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Compare these to the actual numbers.
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Now, you see a very interesting pattern here, which is first of all,
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two things are vastly over-estimated, namely tornadoes and fireworks.
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Two things are vastly underestimated:
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dying by drowning and dying by asthma. Why?
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When was the last time that you picked up a newspaper
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and the headline was, "Boy dies of Asthma?"
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It's not interesting because it's so common.
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It's very easy for all of us to bring to mind instances
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of news stories or newsreels where we've seen
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tornadoes devastating cities, or some poor schmuck
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who's blown his hands off with a firework on the Fourth of July.
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Drownings and asthma deaths don't get much coverage.
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They don't come quickly to mind, and as a result,
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we vastly underestimate them.
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Indeed, this is kind of like the Sesame Street game
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of "Which thing doesn't belong?" And you're right to say
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it's the swimming pool that doesn't belong, because the swimming pool
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is the only thing on this slide that's actually very dangerous.
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The way that more of you are likely to die than the combination
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of all three of the others that you see on the slide.
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The lottery is an excellent example, of course -- an excellent test-case
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of people's ability to compute probabilities.
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And economists -- forgive me, for those of you who play the lottery --
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but economists, at least among themselves, refer to the lottery
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as a stupidity tax, because the odds of getting any payoff
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by investing your money in a lottery ticket
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are approximately equivalent to flushing the money
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directly down the toilet -- which, by the way,
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doesn't require that you actually go to the store and buy anything.
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Why in the world would anybody ever play the lottery?
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Well, there are many answers, but one answer surely is,
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we see a lot of winners. Right? When this couple wins the lottery,
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or Ed McMahon shows up at your door with this giant check --
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how the hell do you cash things that size, I don't know.
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We see this on TV; we read about it in the paper.
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When was the last time that you saw extensive interviews
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with everybody who lost?
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Indeed, if we required that television stations run
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a 30-second interview with each loser
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every time they interview a winner, the 100 million losers
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in the last lottery would require nine-and-a-half years
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of your undivided attention just to watch them say,
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"Me? I lost." "Me? I lost."
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Now, if you watch nine-and-a-half years of television --
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no sleep, no potty breaks -- and you saw loss after loss after loss,
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and then at the end there's 30 seconds of, "and I won,"
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the likelihood that you would play the lottery is very small.
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Look, I can prove this to you: here's a little lottery.
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There's 10 tickets in this lottery.
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Nine of them have been sold to these individuals.
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It costs you a dollar to buy the ticket and, if you win,
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you get 20 bucks. Is this a good bet?
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Well, Bernoulli tells us it is.
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The expected value of this lottery is two dollars;
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this is a lottery in which you should invest your money.
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And most people say, "OK, I'll play."
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Now, a slightly different version of this lottery:
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imagine that the nine tickets are all owned
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by one fat guy named Leroy.
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Leroy has nine tickets; there's one left.
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Do you want it? Most people won't play this lottery.
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Now, you can see the odds of winning haven't changed,
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but it's now fantastically easy to imagine who's going to win.
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It's easy to see Leroy getting the check, right?
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You can't say to yourself, "I'm as likely to win as anybody,"
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because you're not as likely to win as Leroy.
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The fact that all those tickets are owned by one guy
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changes your decision to play,
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even though it does nothing whatsoever to the odds.
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Now, estimating odds, as difficult as it may seem, is a piece of cake
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compared to trying to estimate value:
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trying to say what something is worth, how much we'll enjoy it,
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how much pleasure it will give us.
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I want to talk now about errors in value.
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How much is this Big Mac worth? Is it worth 25 dollars?
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Most of you have the intuition that it's not --
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you wouldn't pay that for it.
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But in fact, to decide whether a Big Mac is worth 25 dollars requires
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that you ask one, and only one question, which is:
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What else can I do with 25 dollars?
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If you've ever gotten on one of those long-haul flights to Australia
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and realized that they're not going to serve you any food,
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but somebody in the row in front of you has just opened
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the McDonald's bag, and the smell of golden arches
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is wafting over the seat, you think,
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I can't do anything else with this 25 dollars for 16 hours.
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I can't even set it on fire -- they took my cigarette lighter!
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Suddenly, 25 dollars for a Big Mac might be a good deal.
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On the other hand, if you're visiting an underdeveloped country,
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and 25 dollars buys you a gourmet meal, it's exorbitant for a Big Mac.
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Why were you all sure that the answer to the question was no,
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before I'd even told you anything about the context?
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Because most of you compared the price of this Big Mac
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to the price you're used to paying. Rather than asking,
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"What else can I do with my money," comparing this investment
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to other possible investments, you compared to the past.
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And this is a systematic error people make.
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What you knew is, you paid three dollars in the past; 25 is outrageous.
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This is an error, and I can prove it to you by showing
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the kinds of irrationalities to which it leads.
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For example, this is, of course,
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one of the most delicious tricks in marketing,
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is to say something used to be higher,
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and suddenly it seems like a very good deal.
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When people are asked about these two different jobs:
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a job where you make 60K, then 50K, then 40K,
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a job where you're getting a salary cut each year,
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and one in which you're getting a salary increase,
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people like the second job better than the first, despite the fact
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they're all told they make much less money. Why?
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Because they had the sense that declining wages are worse
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than rising wages, even when the total amount of wages is higher
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in the declining period. Here's another nice example.
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Here's a $2,000 Hawaiian vacation package; it's now on sale for 1,600.
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Assuming you wanted to go to Hawaii, would you buy this package?
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Most people say they would. Here's a slightly different story:
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$2,000 Hawaiian vacation package is now on sale for 700 dollars,
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so you decide to mull it over for a week.
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By the time you get to the ticket agency, the best fares are gone --
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the package now costs 1,500. Would you buy it? Most people say, no.
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Why? Because it used to cost 700, and there's no way I'm paying 1,500
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for something that was 700 last week.
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This tendency to compare to the past
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is causing people to pass up the better deal. In other words,
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a good deal that used to be a great deal is not nearly as good
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as an awful deal that was once a horrible deal.
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Here's another example of how comparing to the past
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can befuddle our decisions.
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Imagine that you're going to the theater.
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You're on your way to the theater.
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In your wallet you have a ticket, for which you paid 20 dollars.
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You also have a 20-dollar bill.
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When you arrive at the theater,
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you discover that somewhere along the way you've lost the ticket.
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Would you spend your remaining money on replacing it?
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Most people answer, no.
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Now, let's just change one thing in this scenario.
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You're on your way to the theater,
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and in your wallet you have two 20-dollar bills.
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When you arrive you discover you've lost one of them.
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Would you spend your remaining 20 dollars on a ticket?
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Well, of course, I went to the theater to see the play.
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What does the loss of 20 dollars along the way have to do?
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Now, just in case you're not getting it,
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here's a schematic of what happened, OK?
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(Laughter)
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Along the way, you lost something.
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In both cases, it was a piece of paper.
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In one case, it had a U.S. president on it; in the other case it didn't.
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What the hell difference should it make?
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The difference is that when you lost the ticket you say to yourself,
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I'm not paying twice for the same thing.
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You compare the cost of the play now -- 40 dollars --
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to the cost that it used to have -- 20 dollars -- and you say it's a bad deal.
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Comparing with the past causes many of the problems
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that behavioral economists and psychologists identify
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in people's attempts to assign value.
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But even when we compare with the possible, instead of the past,
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we still make certain kinds of mistakes.
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And I'm going to show you one or two of them.
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One of the things we know about comparison:
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that when we compare one thing to the other, it changes its value.
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So in 1992, this fellow, George Bush, for those of us who were
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kind of on the liberal side of the political spectrum,
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didn't seem like such a great guy.
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Suddenly, we're almost longing for him to return.
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(Laughter)
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The comparison changes how we evaluate him.
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Now, retailers knew this long before anybody else did, of course,
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and they use this wisdom to help you --
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spare you the undue burden of money.
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And so a retailer, if you were to go into a wine shop
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and you had to buy a bottle of wine,
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and you see them here for eight, 27 and 33 dollars, what would you do?
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Most people don't want the most expensive,
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they don't want the least expensive.
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So, they will opt for the item in the middle.
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If you're a smart retailer, then, you will put a very expensive item
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that nobody will ever buy on the shelf,
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because suddenly the $33 wine doesn't look as expensive in comparison.
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So I'm telling you something you already knew:
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namely, that comparison changes the value of things.
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Here's why that's a problem:
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the problem is that when you get that $33 bottle of wine home,
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it won't matter what it used to be sitting on the shelf next to.
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The comparisons we make when we are appraising value,
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where we're trying to estimate how much we'll like things,
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are not the same comparisons we'll be making when we consume them.
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This problem of shifting comparisons can bedevil
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our attempts to make rational decisions.
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Let me just give you an example.
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I have to show you something from my own lab, so let me sneak this in.
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These are subjects coming to an experiment to be asked
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the simplest of all questions:
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How much will you enjoy eating potato chips one minute from now?
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They're sitting in a room with potato chips in front of them.
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For some of the subjects, sitting in the far corner of a room
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is a box of Godiva chocolates, and for others is a can of Spam.
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In fact, these items that are sitting in the room change
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how much the subjects think they're going to enjoy the potato chips.
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Namely, those who are looking at Spam
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think potato chips are going to be quite tasty;
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those who are looking at Godiva chocolate
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think they won't be nearly so tasty.
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Of course, what happens when they eat the potato chips?
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Well, look, you didn't need a psychologist to tell you that
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when you have a mouthful of greasy, salty, crispy, delicious snacks,
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what's sitting in the corner of the room
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makes not a damn bit of difference to your gustatory experience.
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Nonetheless, their predictions are perverted by a comparison
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that then does not carry through and change their experience.
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You've all experienced this yourself, even if you've never come
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into our lab to eat potato chips. So here's a question:
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You want to buy a car stereo.
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The dealer near your house sells this particular stereo for 200 dollars,
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but if you drive across town, you can get it for 100 bucks.
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So would you drive to get 50 percent off, saving 100 dollars?
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Most people say they would.
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They can't imagine buying it for twice the price
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when, with one trip across town, they can get it for half off.
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Now, let's imagine instead you wanted to buy a car that had a stereo,
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and the dealer near your house had it for 31,000.
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But if you drove across town, you could get it for 30,900.
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Would you drive to get it? At this point, 0.003 savings -- the 100 dollars.
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Most people say, no, I'm going to schlep across town
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to save 100 bucks on the purchase of a car?
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This kind of thinking drives economists crazy, and it should.
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Because this 100 dollars that you save -- hello! --
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doesn't know where it came from.
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It doesn't know what you saved it on.
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When you go to buy groceries with it, it doesn't go,
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I'm the money saved on the car stereo, or,
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I'm the dumb money saved on the car. It's money.
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And if a drive across town is worth 100 bucks, it's worth 100 bucks
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no matter what you're saving it on. People don't think that way.
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That's why they don't know whether their mutual fund manager
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is taking 0.1 percent or 0.15 percent of their investment,
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but they clip coupons to save one dollar off of toothpaste.
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Now, you can see, this is the problem of shifting comparisons,
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because what you're doing is, you're comparing the 100 bucks
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to the purchase that you're making,
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but when you go to spend that money you won't be making that comparison.
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You've all had this experience.
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If you're an American, for example, you've probably traveled in France.
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And at some point you may have met a couple
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from your own hometown, and you thought,
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"Oh, my God, these people are so warm. They're so nice to me.
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I mean, compared to all these people who hate me
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when I try to speak their language and hate me more when I don't,
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these people are just wonderful." And so you tour France with them,
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and then you get home and you invite them over for dinner,
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and what do you find?
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Compared to your regular friends,
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they are boring and dull, right? Because in this new context,
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the comparison is very, very different. In fact, you find yourself
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disliking them enough almost to qualify for French citizenship.
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Now, you have exactly the same problem when you shop for a stereo.
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You go to the stereo store, you see two sets of speakers --
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these big, boxy, monoliths, and these little, sleek speakers,
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and you play them, and you go, you know, I do hear a difference:
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the big ones sound a little better.
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And so you buy them, and you bring them home,
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and you entirely violate the décor of your house.
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17:53
And the problem, of course, is that this comparison you made in the store
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is a comparison you'll never make again.
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What are the odds that years later you'll turn on the stereo and go,
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"Sounds so much better than those little ones,"
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which you can't even remember hearing.
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The problem of shifting comparisons is even more difficult
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when these choices are arrayed over time.
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People have a lot of trouble making decisions
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about things that will happen at different points in time.
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And what psychologists and behavioral economists have discovered
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is that by and large people use two simple rules.
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So let me give you one very easy problem, a second very easy problem
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and then a third, hard, problem.
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Here's the first easy problem:
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You can have 60 dollars now or 50 dollars now. Which would you prefer?
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This is what we call a one-item IQ test, OK?
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18:37
All of us, I hope, prefer more money, and the reason is,
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we believe more is better than less.
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18:43
Here's the second problem:
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You can have 60 dollars today or 60 dollars in a month. Which would you prefer?
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Again, an easy decision,
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because we all know that now is better than later.
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18:54
What's hard in our decision-making is when these two rules conflict.
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For example, when you're offered 50 dollars now or 60 dollars in a month.
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19:01
This typifies a lot of situations in life in which you will gain
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by waiting, but you have to be patient.
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What do we know? What do people do in these kinds of situations?
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Well, by and large people are enormously impatient.
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That is, they require interest rates in the hundred
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or thousands of percents in order to delay gratification
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and wait until next month for the extra 10 dollars.
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19:25
Maybe that isn't so remarkable, but what is remarkable is
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how easy it is to make this impatience go away by simply changing
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when the delivery of these monetary units will happen.
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Imagine that you can have 50 dollars in a year -- that's 12 months --
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or 60 dollars in 13 months.
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What do we find now?
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People are gladly willing to wait: as long as they're waiting 12,
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they might as well wait 13.
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What makes this dynamic inconsistency happen?
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Comparison. Troubling comparison. Let me show you.
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This is just a graph showing the results that I just suggested
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you would show if I gave you time to respond, which is,
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people find that the subjective value of 50 is higher
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than the subjective value of 60 when they'll be delivered in now
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or one month, respectively -- a 30-day delay --
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20:09
but they show the reverse pattern when you push the entire decision
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off into the future a year.
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20:16
Now, why in the world do you get this pattern of results?
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These guys can tell us.
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What you see here are two lads,
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one of them larger than the other: the fireman and the fiddler.
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20:27
They are going to recede towards the vanishing point in the horizon,
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and I want you to notice two things.
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At no point will the fireman look taller than the fiddler. No point.
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However, the difference between them seems to be getting smaller.
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First it's an inch in your view, then it's a quarter-inch,
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20:44
then a half-inch, and then finally they go off the edge of the earth.
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20:48
Here are the results of what I just showed you.
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This is the subjective height --
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20:53
the height you saw of these guys at various points.
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And I want you to see that two things are true.
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One, the farther away they are, the smaller they look;
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and two, the fireman is always bigger than the fiddler.
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21:03
But watch what happens when we make some of them disappear. Right.
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At a very close distance, the fiddler looks taller than the fireman,
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but at a far distance
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their normal, their true, relations are preserved.
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21:17
As Plato said, what space is to size, time is to value.
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21:22
These are the results of the hard problem I gave you:
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60 now or 50 in a month?
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21:29
And these are subjective values,
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21:30
and what you can see is, our two rules are preserved.
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21:32
People always think more is better than less:
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21:34
60 is always better than 50,
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and they always think now is better than later:
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21:38
the bars on this side are higher than the bars on this side.
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21:41
Watch what happens when we drop some out.
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21:44
Suddenly we have the dynamic inconsistency that puzzled us.
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We have the tendency for people to go for 50 dollars now
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21:51
over waiting a month, but not if that decision is far in the future.
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21:54
Notice something interesting that this implies -- namely, that
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21:58
when people get to the future, they will change their minds.
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22:02
That is, as that month 12 approaches, you will say,
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22:05
what was I thinking, waiting an extra month for 60 dollars?
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22:08
I'll take the 50 dollars now.
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22:11
Well, the question with which I'd like to end is this:
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If we're so damn stupid, how did we get to the moon?
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Because I could go on for about two hours with evidence
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22:20
of people's inability to estimate odds and inability to estimate value.
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22:26
The answer to this question, I think, is an answer you've already heard
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in some of the talks, and I dare say you will hear again:
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22:30
namely, that our brains were evolved for a very different world
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than the one in which we are living.
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22:36
They were evolved for a world
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in which people lived in very small groups,
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22:40
rarely met anybody who was terribly different from themselves,
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22:43
had rather short lives in which there were few choices
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22:46
and the highest priority was to eat and mate today.
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22:51
Bernoulli's gift, Bernoulli's little formula, allows us, it tells us
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22:56
how we should think in a world for which nature never designed us.
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23:01
That explains why we are so bad at using it, but it also explains
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23:05
why it is so terribly important that we become good, fast.
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23:10
We are the only species on this planet
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23:12
that has ever held its own fate in its hands.
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23:16
We have no significant predators,
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23:18
we're the masters of our physical environment;
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23:20
the things that normally cause species to become extinct
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23:23
are no longer any threat to us.
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23:26
The only thing -- the only thing -- that can destroy us and doom us
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23:31
are our own decisions.
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23:33
If we're not here in 10,000 years, it's going to be because
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23:37
we could not take advantage of the gift given to us
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23:41
by a young Dutch fellow in 1738,
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23:44
because we underestimated the odds of our future pains
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23:48
and overestimated the value of our present pleasures.
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23:52
Thank you.
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23:53
(Applause)
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24:03
Chris Anderson: That was remarkable.
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24:06
We have time for some questions for Dan Gilbert. One and two.
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24:11
Bill Lyell: Would you say that this mechanism
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24:14
is in part how terrorism actually works to frighten us,
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24:18
and is there some way that we could counteract that?
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24:22
Dan Gilbert: I actually was consulting recently
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24:23
with the Department of Homeland Security, which generally believes
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24:26
that American security dollars should go to making borders safer.
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24:30
I tried to point out to them that terrorism was a name
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24:33
based on people's psychological reaction to a set of events,
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24:37
and that if they were concerned about terrorism they might ask
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24:39
what causes terror and how can we stop people from being terrified,
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24:42
rather than -- not rather than, but in addition to
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24:45
stopping the atrocities that we're all concerned about.
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24:48
Surely the kinds of play that at least American media give to --
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24:54
and forgive me, but in raw numbers these are very tiny accidents.
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24:59
We already know, for example, in the United States,
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25:01
more people have died as a result of not taking airplanes --
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25:05
because they were scared -- and driving on highways,
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25:07
than were killed in 9/11. OK?
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25:09
If I told you that there was a plague
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25:11
that was going to kill 15,000 Americans next year,
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25:14
you might be alarmed if you didn't find out it was the flu.
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25:17
These are small-scale accidents, and we should be wondering
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25:20
whether they should get the kind of play,
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25:22
the kind of coverage, that they do.
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25:24
Surely that causes people to overestimate the likelihood
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25:27
that they'll be hurt in these various ways,
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25:29
and gives power to the very people who want to frighten us.
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25:31
CA: Dan, I'd like to hear more on this. So, you're saying
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25:33
that our response to terror is, I mean, it's a form of mental bug?
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25:37
Talk more about it.
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25:38
DG: It's out-sized. I mean, look.
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25:41
If Australia disappears tomorrow,
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25:43
terror is probably the right response.
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25:45
That's an awful large lot of very nice people. On the other hand,
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25:50
when a bus blows up and 30 people are killed,
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25:53
more people than that were killed
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25:55
by not using their seatbelts in the same country.
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25:58
Is terror the right response?
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25:59
CA: What causes the bug? Is it the drama of the event --
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26:03
that it's so spectacular?
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26:04
Is it the fact that it's an intentional attack by, quote, outsiders?
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26:07
What is it?
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26:08
DG: Yes. It's a number of things, and you hit on several of them.
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26:11
First, it's a human agent trying to kill us --
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26:13
it's not a tree falling on us by accident.
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26:16
Second, these are enemies who may want to strike and hurt us again.
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26:19
People are being killed for no reason instead of good reason --
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26:22
as if there's good reason, but sometimes people think there are.
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26:25
So there are a number of things that together
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26:27
make this seem like a fantastic event, but let's not play down
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26:30
the fact that newspapers sell when people see something in it
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26:34
they want to read. So there's a large role here played by the media,
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26:37
who want these things to be
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26:39
as spectacular as they possibly can.
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26:43
CA: I mean, what would it take to persuade our culture to downplay it?
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26:49
DG: Well, go to Israel. You know,
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26:50
go to Israel. And a mall blows up,
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26:52
and then everybody's unhappy about it, and an hour-and-a-half later --
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26:55
at least when I was there, and I was 150 feet from the mall
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26:58
when it blew up -- I went back to my hotel
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27:00
and the wedding that was planned was still going on.
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27:03
And as the Israeli mother said,
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27:04
she said, "We never let them win by stopping weddings."
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27:08
I mean, this is a society that has learned --
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27:09
and there are others too -- that has learned to live
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27:11
with a certain amount of terrorism and not be quite as upset by it,
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27:16
shall I say, as those of us who have not had many terror attacks.
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27:19
CA: But is there a rational fear that actually,
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27:22
the reason we're frightened about this is because we think that
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27:25
the Big One is to come?
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27:26
DG: Yes, of course. So, if we knew that this was the worst attack
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27:30
there would ever be, there might be more and more buses of 30 people --
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27:34
we would probably not be nearly so frightened.
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27:36
I don't want to say -- please, I'm going to get quoted somewhere
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27:38
as saying, "Terrorism is fine and we shouldn't be so distressed."
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That's not my point at all.
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What I'm saying is that, surely, rationally,
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our distress about things that happen, about threats,
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should be roughly proportional to the size of those threats
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and threats to come.
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I think in the case of terrorism, it isn't.
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And many of the things we've heard about from our speakers today --
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how many people do you know got up and said,
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Poverty! I can't believe what poverty is doing to us.
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People get up in the morning; they don't care about poverty.
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It's not making headlines, it's not making news, it's not flashy.
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There are no guns going off.
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I mean, if you had to solve one of these problems, Chris,
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which would you solve? Terrorism or poverty?
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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That's a tough one.
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CA: There's no question.
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Poverty, by an order of magnitude, a huge order of magnitude,
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unless someone can show that there's, you know,
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terrorists with a nuke are really likely to come.
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The latest I've read, seen, thought
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is that it's incredibly hard for them to do that.
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If that turns out to be wrong, we all look silly,
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but with poverty it's a bit --
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DG: Even if that were true, still more people die from poverty.
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CA: We've evolved to get all excited
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about these dramatic attacks. Is that because in the past,
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in the ancient past, we just didn't understand things like disease
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and systems that cause poverty and so forth,
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and so it made no sense for us as a species to put any energy
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into worrying about those things?
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People died; so be it.
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But if you got attacked, that was something you could do something about.
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And so we evolved these responses.
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Is that what happened?
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DG: Well, you know, the people who are most skeptical
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about leaping to evolutionary explanations for everything
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are the evolutionary psychologists themselves.
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My guess is that there's nothing quite that specific
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in our evolutionary past. But rather, if you're looking for
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an evolutionary explanation, you might say
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that most organisms are neo-phobic -- that is, they're a little scared
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of stuff that's new and different.
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And there's a good reason to be,
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because old stuff didn't eat you. Right?
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Any animal you see that you've seen before is less likely
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to be a predator than one that you've never seen before.
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So, you know, when a school bus is blown up and we've never seen this before,
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our general tendency is to orient towards
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that which is new and novel is activated.
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I don't think it's quite as specific a mechanism
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as the one you alluded to, but maybe a more fundamental one underlying it.
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Jay Walker: You know, economists love to talk about
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the stupidity of people who buy lottery tickets. But I suspect
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you're making the exact same error you're accusing those people of,
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which is the error of value.
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I know, because I've interviewed
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about 1,000 lottery buyers over the years.
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It turns out that the value of buying a lottery ticket is not winning.
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That's what you think it is. All right?
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The average lottery buyer buys about 150 tickets a year,
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so the buyer knows full well that he or she is going to lose,
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and yet she buys 150 tickets a year. Why is that?
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It's not because she is stupid or he is stupid.
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It's because the anticipation of possibly winning
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releases serotonin in the brain, and actually provides a good feeling
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30:44
until the drawing indicates you've lost.
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30:46
Or, to put it another way, for the dollar investment,
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you can have a much better feeling than flushing the money
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down the toilet, which you cannot have a good feeling from.
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Now, economists tend to --
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(Applause)
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-- economists tend to view the world
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through their own lenses, which is:
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this is just a bunch of stupid people.
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And as a result, many people look at economists as stupid people.
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And so fundamentally, the reason we got to the moon is,
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we didn't listen to the economists. Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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DG: Well, no, it's a great point. It remains to be seen
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whether the joy of anticipation is exactly equaled
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by the amount of disappointment after the lottery. Because remember,
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people who didn't buy tickets don't feel awful the next day either,
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even though they don't feel great during the drawing.
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31:35
I would disagree that people know they're not going to win.
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31:37
I think they think it's unlikely, but it could happen,
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which is why they prefer that to the flushing.
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But certainly I see your point: that there can be
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some utility to buying a lottery ticket other than winning.
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31:50
Now, I think there's many good reasons not to listen to economists.
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That isn't one of them, for me, but there's many others.
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31:56
CA: Last question.
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Aubrey de Grey: My name's Aubrey de Grey, from Cambridge.
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I work on the thing that kills more people than anything else kills --
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I work on aging -- and I'm interested in doing something about it,
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as we'll all hear tomorrow.
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I very much resonate with what you're saying,
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because it seems to me that the problem
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with getting people interested in doing anything about aging
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is that by the time aging is about to kill you it looks like cancer
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or heart disease or whatever. Do you have any advice?
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(Laughter)
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DG: For you or for them?
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AdG: In persuading them.
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DG: Ah, for you in persuading them.
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Well, it's notoriously difficult to get people to be farsighted.
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But one thing that psychologists have tried that seems to work
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is to get people to imagine the future more vividly.
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One of the problems with making decisions about the far future
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and the near future is that we imagine the near future
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much more vividly than the far future.
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To the extent that you can equalize the amount of detail
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that people put into the mental representations
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of near and far future, people begin to make decisions
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32:55
about the two in the same way.
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So, would you like to have an extra 100,000 dollars when you're 65
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is a question that's very different than,
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imagine who you'll be when you're 65: will you be living,
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33:07
what will you look like, how much hair will you have,
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who will you be living with.
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Once we have all the details of that imaginary scenario,
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suddenly we feel like it might be important to save
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so that that guy has a little retirement money.
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But these are tricks around the margins.
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I think in general you're battling a very fundamental human tendency,
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which is to say, "I'm here today,
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and so now is more important than later."
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CA: Dan, thank you. Members of the audience,
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that was a fantastic session. Thank you.
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33:31
(Applause)
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