logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: Nudge
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
review 2020-02-22 11:44
Caniformes by give_it_a_little_nudge
Caniformes - give_it_a_little_nudge

Wow, took me a month to read this super long fic, the longest in the supernatural fandom on AO3. This epic covers only 7 months in time excluding the 'Then' sequences and the epilogue. A well written fic with excellent world building, some scenes are not for the squeamish.

Source: archiveofourown.org/works/10686864
Like Reblog Comment
review 2017-05-04 04:13
Well-written, imaginative, clever, but left me cold.
Eating Robots: And Other Stories (Nudge the Future) - Stephen Oram

I flipped through my thesaurus to find some decent synonyms for imaginative, because I need a few to talk about this collection. Didn't find any that I liked, alas -- this collection needs me to say something more than imaginative, just to avoid being dull and repetitive.

 

These stories are short -- it's not fair to call most of these stories, they're more like scenes. Hints of a story, character studies, maybe hints of a scene -- and on the one hand you can see most to of these happening in other parts of the same world -- but they don't have to, there could be a 30 different future realities represented here.

 

These are almost entirely too short. Some of the character moments are great -- but even they don't satisfy. The longer stories (there are not that many of them) barely seemed long enough to be a decent story -- and they were good. There is a strong <b>Twilight Zone</b> feel to almost every plot and circumstance in the book -- updated, like Rod Serling for the 21st Century.

 

I can not say it enough -- Oram can write. He's got a great imagination, and a mind for Science Fiction. But between the length and his approach, I just couldn't get into any of the stories, I couldn't care about anyone or anything in this book. I respect these stories, but I didn't like any of them. I can easily see me being alone in that, though, if someone came along and told me that this was one of the best collections they read this year, I'd understand. I wouldn't agree, but I could see where they were coming from. I hope Oram finds his audience (or that they find him), sadly, I'm not part of it.

 

<i>I received a copy of this book from b00k r3vi3w Tours in return for this post. Thanks!</i>

 

<a href="http://www.b00kr3vi3ws.in" target="_blank"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://www.hcnewton.com/irrreader/ertour.jpg" alt="" /></a>

Source: irresponsiblereader.com/2017/05/03/eating-robots-by-stephen-oram
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
text 2017-03-13 19:02
Nudge › Richard H. Thaler, Cass R. Sunstein $1,99
Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness - Richard H. Thaler,Cass R. Sunstein

Nudge is about choices—how we make them and how we can make better ones. Drawing on decades of research in the fields of behavioral science and economics, authors Richard H. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein offer a new perspective on preventing the countless mistakes we make—ill-advised personal investments, consumption of unhealthy foods, neglect of our natural resources—and show us how sensible “choice architecture” can successfully nudge people toward the best decisions. In the tradition of The Tipping Point and Freakonomics, Nudge is straightforward, informative, and entertaining—a must-read for anyone interested in our individual and collective well-being.

Like Reblog Comment
review 2016-11-14 00:00
Inside the Nudge Unit: How Small Changes Can Make a Big Difference
Inside the Nudge Unit: How Small Changes... Inside the Nudge Unit: How Small Changes Can Make a Big Difference - David Halpern Q:
For Aristotle, the pursuit of ‘eudaimonia’ – let’s call it happiness for the moment – was the ultimate objective in life, since all other goals, be they material or spiritual, were a means to this end. He saw it as a distinguishing feature of humans that we could use our reasoning to choose actions that would attain this state: seeing through momentary pleasures, or discomforts, to fashion a life of virtue, intellectual curiosity and friendship, and through these attain a deep sense of what we would call well-being. Happiness was not just a fleeting mental state, but ‘an activity of the soul’, and one that took a lifetime to achieve: ‘for as it is not one swallow or one fine day that makes a spring, so it is not one day or a short time that makes a man blessed and happy’.
(c)
Q:
‘Radical incrementalism’ is the idea that dramatic improvements can be achieved, and are more likely to be achieved, by systematically testing small variations in everything we do, rather than through dramatic leaps in the dark. For example, the dramatic wins of the British cycling team at the 2012 London Olympics are widely attributed to the systematic testing by the team of many variations of the bike design and training schedules. Many of these led to small improvements, such as getting the cyclists to bring their own pillows when away to reduce the likelihood of getting sick and missing training, but when combined created a winning team. Similarly, many of the dramatic advances in survival rates for cancer over the last 30 years are more due to constant refinements in treatment dosage and combination than to new ‘breakthrough’ drugs.
F-test!
(c)
Q:
Just because an approach is effective doesn’t mean that it’s right. Do nudges, and other behavioural approaches, wear off? If behavioural approaches are so powerful, should there be tighter limits and controls on those who use them, both in government and business?
(c)
Q:
The discussion is organised around three broad areas of concern: Lack of transparency – that behavioural approaches are too close to the dark arts of propaganda and subconscious manipulation (a concern of the right). Lack of efficacy – that behavioural approaches are an excuse for not acting more decisively and effectively (a concern of the left). Lack of accountability – that the behavioural scientists and decision-makers behind these approaches need to be more answerable to those they affect (a concern of liberals and democrats).
(c)
Q:
This is a concern that should be taken seriously. ‘Nudge-style’ approaches at their core are based on the idea that many decisions and behaviours are rooted in very rapid, often unconscious patterns of thought. If people tend to avoid the highest and lowest priced of a set of choices, be it a beer or a financial product, once sellers have this information they can ‘trick’ consumers into paying more by adding extra high-price items at the top and trimming out the lower price options. Similarly, armed with the knowledge that people strongly anchor to the default option, couldn’t governments and businesses get away with all kinds of mischief? The very automatic nature of such decision-making suggests that the skilled nudger can influence our behaviour without us even noticing.
In a strong form, one could argue that such approaches bring a lack of transparency and constrain freedom, and are even inherently antidemocratic since they are not consciously chosen by the citizens who are affected. Isn’t it, to use a word that would send shudders down the spine of any libertarian, manipulation?
It is this manipulation concern about nudging that strikes a particularly raw nerve in the USA, and one that Cass Sunstein especially had to wrestle with in the White House. It is an argument that he continues to wrestle with now that he has the freedom to write again back in academia. Similarly for Richard Thaler, always a Chicago economist at heart, this critique of nudging as ‘manipulation’ is one that he has always been extremely sensitive to.
For Sunstein and Thaler, the originators of the term ‘nudging’, their first response has always been that nudges should be both ‘choice-enhancing’ – or at least not choice-restricting – and transparent. In this sense, the nudge is to be seen as an alternative mandating or banning. For example, changing the default on a pension scheme from one that is an opt-in scheme for employees to an opt-out does not eliminate the choice. Employees are still free to opt out if they wish to do so. It is transparent what the choice is, and employees are informed by law about it. In contrast, in some western countries you are obliged to save – though you may have some choice about your pension provider.
(c)
Like Reblog Comment
review 2014-04-02 00:00
Nudge
Nudge - Sandra Moran This is not a lesfic romance. The premise is intriguing. The execution is good except for too many detailed discussions about religions and religious figures. I am biased here because I thoroughly enjoyed the chapters about Joan of Arc and Rebecca Nurse but not the other historical figures. :) My rating is based on the fact that I was expecting a lesfic romance, not a dry historical treatise in between elements of intrigue. Other readers may like it better.

3.5 stars.
More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?