I’m a graduated International Relations student from London. I took a year off after graduation to learn how to manage my finances and invest in the stock market. Because of that, I came across my life hero, Charlie Munger, the vice-chairman of Berkshire Hathaway. He is a machine of rationality and is by far one of the wisest men (if not the wisest) alive. He wrote an essay called, “The psychology of human misjudgement” (http://law.indiana.edu/instruction/profession/doc/16_1.pdf) which I implore all rationality-seekers to devour. This essay changed my life, and I have never looked back.
Charlie said that we all have a moral obligation to be rational. So, here I am :)
One of my primary pieces of exposure to Munger is Peter Bevelin’s book, Seeking Wisdom from Darwin to Munger, which I think you might enjoy—as I recall, it draws from the same Heuristics and Biases literature as many other things (like Munger’s essay) but has enough examples that don’t show up in the more standard works (Thinking and Deciding, Thinking Fast and Slow, etc.) to be worthwhile on its own.
Thanks for the recommendation. I’ve seen Bevelin’s book come up many times during my Munger-searches, but I haven’t gotten around to reading it yet. I’m sure I’ll more than enjoy it.
Hello all!
I’m a graduated International Relations student from London. I took a year off after graduation to learn how to manage my finances and invest in the stock market. Because of that, I came across my life hero, Charlie Munger, the vice-chairman of Berkshire Hathaway. He is a machine of rationality and is by far one of the wisest men (if not the wisest) alive. He wrote an essay called, “The psychology of human misjudgement” (http://law.indiana.edu/instruction/profession/doc/16_1.pdf) which I implore all rationality-seekers to devour. This essay changed my life, and I have never looked back.
Charlie said that we all have a moral obligation to be rational. So, here I am :)
Welcome!
One of my primary pieces of exposure to Munger is Peter Bevelin’s book, Seeking Wisdom from Darwin to Munger, which I think you might enjoy—as I recall, it draws from the same Heuristics and Biases literature as many other things (like Munger’s essay) but has enough examples that don’t show up in the more standard works (Thinking and Deciding, Thinking Fast and Slow, etc.) to be worthwhile on its own.
Thanks for the recommendation. I’ve seen Bevelin’s book come up many times during my Munger-searches, but I haven’t gotten around to reading it yet. I’m sure I’ll more than enjoy it.