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Peter Bevelin

Seeking Wisdom: From Darwin To Munger

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Peter Bevelin begins his fascinating book with Confucius' great wisdom: “A man who has committed a mistake and doesn't correct it, is committing another mistake.” Seeking Wisdom is the result of Bevelin's learning about attaining wisdom. His quest for wisdom originated partly from making mistakes himself and observing those of others but also from the philosophy of super-investor and Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chairman Charles Munger. A man whose simplicity and clarity of thought was unequal to anything Bevelin had seen. In addition to naturalist Charles Darwin and Munger, Bevelin cites an encyclopedic range of thinkers: from first-century BCE Roman poet Publius Terentius to Mark Twain-from Albert Einstein to Richard Feynman-from 16th Century French essayist Michel de Montaigne to Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett. In the book, he describes ideas and research findings from many different fields. This book is for those who love the constant search for knowledge. It is in the spirit of Charles Munger, who says, “All I want to know is where I'm going to die so I'll never go there.” There are roads that lead to unhappiness. An understanding of how and why we can “die” should help us avoid them. We can't eliminate mistakes, but we can prevent those that can really hurt us. Using exemplars of clear thinking and attained wisdom, Bevelin focuses on how our thoughts are influenced, why we make misjudgments and tools to improve our thinking. Bevelin tackles such eternal questions as: Why do we behave like we do? What do we want out of life? What interferes with our goals? Read and study this wonderful multidisciplinary exploration of wisdom. It may change the way you think and act in business and in life.
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    Upton Sinclair: “It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on him not understanding it”

    Buffet: Never trust financial projections

    Munger: Recognize your limits, how much you don’t know. Don’t try to be the smartest, just the least dumb.

    Feynman: “The first principle is that you must no fool yourself, and ou are the easiest person to fool”

    We tend to make fast judgments and then doubt ourselves when we start to think the answer might be different, we don’t like being wrong.

    Seneca: “There is nothing wrong with changing a plan when the situation has changed.”

    If you aren’t sure if you want to do something in the future, ask yourself if you would want to do it tomorrow.

    Huxley: “Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.”

    Buffet: “You don’t have to make it back the way you lost it, in fact, that’s usually a mistake.”

    Know your goals and opinions, do you want this for emotional or rational reasons?

    The Noah Principle: Predicting rain doesn’t count, building arks does.

    People would rather be wrong in a group than be right by themselves.

    If everyone is on agreement on a decision, it’s better to postpone until someone can come up with a good argument against it.

    You’re neither right nor wrong because the crowd disagrees, you’re right or wrong based on your data and reasoning.

    Experts can be more convincing when we don’t understand them, we assume that means that they’re smarter.

    What do you want to accomplish? Buffet: “There’s no use running if you’re on the wrong road.”

    Socrates: “Awareness of ignorance is the beginning of wisdom.”

    When we feel sad, we may want to change our circumstances so that we feel better.

    Our cortisol levels rise the more than other people order us about.

    The less we know about an issue, the more we’ll be influenced by how it is framed.

    Three Pieces of Advice on Not Being Dumb from Munger:
    You can learn to make fewer mistakes and fix them faster, and learn to handle them better. Sometimes you have to quit while holding a much loved hand.
    Two track analysis : What are the factors that govern the interests involved, and what are the subconscious influences where the brain is automatically doing things, what could be causing psychological misjudgments.
    Take all the main models from psychology and use them as a checklist in reviewing outcomes. And you must pay special attention to combinatorial lollapalooza effects.

    The Physics and Mathematics of Misjudgements:
    One way to reduce unintended consequences is to stop focusing on isolated factors and instead consider how our actions affect the whole system.

    What key factors influence the outcome of the system and how do those factors interact? What other things may change as a consequence of some action?

    Over optimizing one variable could cause the whole system to perform worse.

    Avoid acting on symptoms, don’t mistake an effect for its cause.

    Look at where the bullet holes are, and put extra armor everywhere else.

    Einstein: “Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts.”

    We often pay little or no attention to times when nothing happens.

    Russell: “Uncertainty, in the presence of vivid hopes and fears, is painful, but must be endured if we wish to live without the support of comforting fairy tales.”

    Post mortems are important in any project. What were the original reasons and assumptions? How did it turn out? DId you make errors in judgment?

    Guidelines to Better Thinking:
    Autocatalysis: A process in chemistry whereby once something gets going, it speeds up and keeps going on it’s own. This can’t go on forever, but it’s a useful model for finding ways where doing A can also get you B and C for a while.

    More useful models: Backup systems from engineering, Breakpoints, Critical Mass from physics.

    Have a full kit of tools, go through them in your mind checklist style, you need to base them on fundamental truths in order to do the soundest reasoning.

    You’ll also find functional equivalents between disciplines, the concept of viscocity in chemistry is very similar to stickiness in economics.

    Create “one sentence explanations” for big ideas. “We get what we reward for.” “Energy is neither created nor destroyed, only changed from one form to another.”

    A simple way to learn more about reality is to look around us and ask “why.”

    Feynman test for understanding: “Without using the new word you have just learned, try to rephrase what you have learned in your own language. Without using the word “energy,” tell me what you know about the dog’s motion.”

    Using precise numbers is frequently foolish, instead it’s better to work with a range of possible futures.

    "What counts in investing is not how much they know, but how realistically they can define what they don’t know. An investor needs to do very few things right as long as he or she avoids big mistakes."

    Ask the right questions: “The formulatoin of a problem is often more essential than its solution, which may be merely matter of mathematical or experimental skill.” – Einstein

    Avoid what causes the opposite of what you want to acheive, you must always invert.

    Would you be willing to see your action on the front page of a newspaper, for everyone you know to see?

    Live in the present, don’t be so concerned with the past or future.

    Munger on Models: You need the best 100 or so models from microeconomics, physiology, psychology, math, hard science, enegineering, etc. You just need to take the really big ideas and learn them early and well… but you must learn them so that they become part of your ever used repertoire, not just facts that you bang back to a professor.

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