

This is another book that's ultimately on bias, and in terms of the research there's a good bit of overlap with Kahneman, but the presentation is different. He really focuses on the economics and the underlying "rational actor" assumption the entire field was built on for decades, and how he used our growing understanding of humans as inherently irrational to help completely change the field. The standard is no longer blindly assuming a perfectly rational person with perfect information acting perfectly in his/her own interest. Instead, the priority is looking at patterns of real behavior in real world situations, and how to apply that knowledge to inform decisions.
This is another book that's ultimately on bias, and in terms of the research there's a good bit of overlap with Kahneman, but the presentation is different. He really focuses on the economics and the underlying "rational actor" assumption the entire field was built on for decades, and how he used our growing understanding of humans as inherently irrational to help completely change the field. The standard is no longer blindly assuming a perfectly rational person with perfect information acting perfectly in his/her own interest. Instead, the priority is looking at patterns of real behavior in real world situations, and how to apply that knowledge to inform decisions.