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Super Thinking

Super Thinking

The Big Book of Mental Models

by Gabriel Weinberg

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Should I read this?

appears in Psychology, Personal Development, and Business.

A Wall Street Journal Bestseller!"You can't really know anything if you just remember isolated facts. If the facts don't hang together on a latticework of theory, you don't have them in a usable form. You've got to have models in your head." Charlie Munger, investor, vice chairman of Berkshire HathawayThe world's greatest problemsolvers, forecast...

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appears in Psychology, Personal Development, and Business.

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Appears In

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Consider The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy. Recommended by 8 sources.

Soft-spoken, heavily illustrated fable built from short dialogues and watercolor sketches. Each spread pairs a spare line of text with a loose drawing, so the pleasure is visual and aphoristic rather than narrative; readers collect felt-true sentences more than plot. Most useful when you want quick consolations, a prompt for conversation with a child, or a pause during a rough day. Limiting if you want sustained argument, concrete advice, or tightly plotted storytelling: the repetition of gentleness can feel sentimental or thin after a while.

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Super Thinking

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