Download The Social Atom: Why the Rich Get Richer, Cheaters Get Caught, and Your Neighbor Usually Looks Like You AudioBook Free
The idiosyncrasies of real human decision-making have confounded economists and interpersonal theorists for years. If each person makes selections for personal (and often irrational) reasons, how do people’s choices be predicted by an individual theory? How do any economic, interpersonal, or politics theory be valid? The simple truth is, do not require are really.
Draw Buchanan makes the exciting argument that the science of physics is starting to give a new picture of the real human or “interpersonal atom,” and help us understand the surprising, and often predictable, habits that emerge when they get together. Look at habits, not people, Buchanan argues, and guidelines emerge that can make clear how movements form, how interest categories operate, and even why cultural hatred persists. Using similar observations, interpersonal physicists can forecast whether neighborhoods will incorporate, whether stock markets will crash, and whether criminal offenses waves will continue or abate.
Brimming with head game titles and provocative tests, The Sociable Atom is an incisive, accessible, and complete argument for a whole new way to look at human social tendencies.
Draw Buchanan makes the exciting argument that the science of physics is starting to give a new picture of the real human or “interpersonal atom,” and help us understand the surprising, and often predictable, habits that emerge when they get together. Look at habits, not people, Buchanan argues, and guidelines emerge that can make clear how movements form, how interest categories operate, and even why cultural hatred persists. Using similar observations, interpersonal physicists can forecast whether neighborhoods will incorporate, whether stock markets will crash, and whether criminal offenses waves will continue or abate.
Brimming with head game titles and provocative tests, The Sociable Atom is an incisive, accessible, and complete argument for a whole new way to look at human social tendencies.