wrentheblurry's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH

I selected this on a whim while searching for a new book to listen to while at work. I figured, sure, I could stand some improvement in my decision making process. Who couldn't? So I spend the time to transfer the 10 CDs to my iTunes and then move it to my Nano. I am pleased to report there were no major issues with this--the author was consistent across all discs and most of the CDs were titled appropriately. Thanks for that.

However, within an hour of listening I knew the material was too dry and professional oriented for me. It also seemed to be targeted more towards utilizing the information in a business setting, though it was early on, and hard to tell. I listened a bit longer, until the author mentioned that his ideals were endorsed by (and that's a paraphrase)...Rick Santorum. At that point, I knew I was done with this disc!
informative slow-paced

Good read.... Some of the discussion was familiar earlier so was not super excited at the end..

I enjoy this book. It defends libertarian paternalism, the idea institutions can affect decisions while respecting freedom of choice. The idea promotes actively engineering choice architectures. I agree with the idea because I believe that intentional, well-designed systems make the world a better place. Many existing systems (think the QWERTY keyboard) are standard/well-adopted not because they're optimal, but because of luck/randomness. I also like that the book includes concrete policy suggestions for increasing retirement savings, improving the environment, increasing organ donations, etc, so it didn't feel like "fluffy" pop psychology.

I am glad to see that in 2015 many of these have been implemented in real life.

This was eh. The whole book isn't really based on anything inventive or remarkable enough to be stretched into a book of ~300 pages but I enjoyed the examples about roads and stuff
I think I can't help but be apathetic to the book's overall message because it just doesn't align to me politically?i think. You will probably enjoy this if you are a true centrist

underwhelming for the most part with bits of brilliance in between
challenging informative reflective medium-paced

nudge for good!

*I will update my review and shelves later.*