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Kluge
- The Haphazard Construction of the Human Mind
- Narrated by: Stephen Hoye
- Length: 6 hrs and 33 mins
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Publisher's summary
Taking us on a tour of the fundamental areas of human experience - memory, belief, decision making, language, and happiness - Marcus reveals the myriad ways our minds fall short. He examines why people often vote against their own interests, why money can't buy happiness, why leaders often stick to bad decisions, and why a sentence like "people people left left" ties us into knots even though it's only four words long.
He also offers surprisingly effective ways to outwit our inner kluge - for example, always consider alternative explanations, make contingency plans, and beware the vivid, personal anecdote. Throughout, he shows how only evolution - haphazard and undirected - could have produced the minds we humans have, while making a brilliant case for the power and usefulness of imperfection.
Critic reviews
"The book is wholly accessible to the nonspecialist but likely to attract those already acquainted with amygdala, gyral cortex, and other landmarks in the cerebral map." ( Kirkus)
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What listeners say about Kluge
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Gurmukh
- 06-07-08
An Interesting Overview
Kluge is an interesting overview of the makeup of the human mind and how it may not always operate as we would hope.
I listened to Kluge shortly after also listening to Gut Feelings by Gerd Gigerenzer of the Max Planck institute. I highly recommend reading them both in quick succession because they each advance arguments that conflict with the other and help put some perspective on both of them.
In Kluge, Marcus does a good job of illustrating many of the ways that our human brain, as well as the way we think falls short of perfection. Understanding our shortcomings is important, not to mention highly interesting.
But I can't help feeling that he's showing some of his own mental shortcomings in his arguments. He laments, for example, that we have an inefficient memory system, and argues that we would be better off with a "postal code" type system that would enable total recall.
However, he fails to consider the cases of people with exceptional memory and how they fit into the equation. The oversight seems to be his own case of confirmation bias, one of the examples of "kluginess" he details.
Gigerenzer's book does examine cases of such exceptional memory and illustrates that there appear to be some significant downsides - a fact that deserves to be explored in greater detail.
Kluge also lists some arguments counter to his, which are summarily dismissed. But the book doesn't address any of Gigerenzer's studies that show significant benefits to mental heuristics that rely on ignorance rather than solid data.
At times Kluge also seems a little overly critical, such as when it puts forth the notion that the species could benefit from a pill to cure procrastination.
But in general, Kluge outlines many interesting flaws in general human reasoning. I particularly enjoyed many of the tips for better decision making in the final chapter.
Overall, Kluge is a good read. I recommend it to anyone interested in human thought.
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16 people found this helpful
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- Joshua Kim
- 06-10-12
Elegant
Fascinating extension of the evolutionary psychology framework. Argues that our brains have evolved in often "klugy" ways, meaning that evolution favors what works (and what comes first) and not what is optimal. I learned a good deal about things like memory, emotions, and perception...and now I know why I can be so dumb sometimes. Well written....a fun read.
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10 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Morgan
- 07-14-08
Author's thinking a bit klugy
(This it the first review I've written for Audible after listening to perhaps 30 books. My motivation was primarily my dissatisfaction with the book.)
The book and the author's expertise on the brain could have been so much more and compares poorly to others of the same subgenre (e.g., The Paradox of Choice).
Unfortunately, this author decided to use his book on the brain as a bully pulpit for pontificating about how he would have done so much better designing the human mind "if it were up to him". He also erroneously argues that the information he presents is new and proves evolution. His argument, boiled down, is: the human mind is imperfect, therefore it must be the product of chance, not design. This is where I as a reader start to yawn and think "why am I spending my time listening to someone try to argue such a position?" He seems to think that we as the human race haven't known for millenia that human memory is weak and often our perceptions are mistaken and that somehow he's bringing these things to everyone's attention as something new.
Bottom line: marginally worth the time to listen to, if you can endure the author's faulty logic; author is a bit filled with himself and "how he would do it" if he were god; much better books in this subgenre.
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9 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Sarah C
- 09-29-08
Too obvious
The ideas this book was advertised to address sounded interesting, fascinating even, but in reality there is nothing new or noteworthy here. All of the "insights" you have long ago figured out for yourself (unless you are still 15 yrs old) and none of the "solutions" are inspired or helpful. This is all old hat. Disappointing. But read very well!
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2 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Dan
- 06-22-08
Not the greatest..
A little boring and far fetching... trying to relate everything to being a Kluge - and seems to over think and complicate simple items. It was okay, but not sure if I would repurchase.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Tom
- 01-25-24
Comforting theory of Brain Evolution on many levels.
I enjoyed Marcus’ arguments for a Brain evolved in fits and starts in incremental steps, correcting for errors, and building on previous solutions. This theory is so much more reasonable than that of the Supercomputer Brain created out of whole cloth by some Omniscient Creator.
He touches on the Questionable Reliability of Memory, the Decision-Making Process, and the Search for Happiness and Pleasure. He points out the points of failure and success that demonstrate what we all understand as the Humanity and fallibility of the Brain. Recognizing these issues he even offers suggestions that might help us use this wonderful organ more effectively.
Four Stars. ****
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- FrankieJames7
- 12-14-20
mostly good
gary doesn't know everything and is clueless on some of the stuff he talks about, but the main message, evolution is real and humans have flaws because of it, is awesome. if you are a creationist i suggest you don't buy this book
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- ADog
- 12-12-20
Enjoyable, informative, though provoking, and very interesting!
I have a layman’s affinity for Evolution Psychology and this didn’t let me down. I enjoyed it.
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- BigWally
- 02-15-19
Fascinating Book!
This is a wonderful book by an esteemed NYU psychology professor which discusses how our brains are constructed. His basic premise is that our brains evolved to be "just good enough" to accomplish a particular task. Kluge refers to an inelegant solution to a problem. Because of this we humans make many mistakes, etc. One of the most interesting books I have listened to in many years. I hope the author updates the book periodically as this book was published in 2008 or 11 years ago. Even so, the book's fundamental premise is true.
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- Bryanoutside
- 06-21-18
Mandatory Reading
A great overview to the challenges we face as thinking creatures. A totally delightful listen.
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