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Debt: The First 5000 Years

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About The\u00a0Intelligence Trap<\/h2>\r\n

The Intelligence Trap: Why Smart People Make Bad Decisions and How to Make Better Ones<\/em> explores the surprising gap between intelligence and wise thinking. Journalist and science writer David Robson draws on psychology, neuroscience, and real\u2011world examples to reveal how cognitive biases, overconfidence, and narrow expertise can lead even highly intelligent people astray.<\/p>\r\n

The book explains why traditional measures of intelligence (like IQ) don\u2019t guarantee good decision\u2011making and how smart individuals often fall into reasoning errors such as confirmation bias, groupthink, and overanalyzing. Robson offers practical strategies to improve thinking\u2014including how to embrace uncertainty, question assumptions, consider alternatives, and build better mental habits. The Intelligence Trap<\/em> is both enlightening and accessible, giving readers tools to understand their own thinking and make smarter choices in life, work, and relationships.\"\"<\/p>\r\n\r\n

About the Author\u00a0 David Robson<\/h2>\r\nDavid Robson is a British science journalist and author known for writing about psychology, human behavior, and the brain. His work appears in major publications like BBC Future<\/em>, The Atlantic<\/em>, and Nature<\/em>, where he explains complex scientific ideas in engaging, relatable ways. Robson combines rigorous research with compelling storytelling to help readers better understand how the mind works\u2014and how to think more clearly.\r\n

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ناساندنی بەرهەم

In Debt:

The First 5,000 Years, David Graeber traces the origins and evolution of debt from ancient civilizations to the modern era, blending anthropology, history, and economics. Graeber challenges the conventional narrative that money and markets naturally led to commerce, arguing instead that systems of credit and debt historically predated coinage and often shaped social hierarchies and moral codes.

The book examines the complex interplay between debt, power, and social obligation, highlighting how rulers, religious institutions, and governments have historically used debt to exert control. Graeber also critiques modern economic assumptions, showing how debt remains a central yet often misunderstood force in contemporary life. Provocative and deeply researched, Debt invites readers to rethink the moral and social dimensions of economic life, questioning who really benefits from the debt system.

About the Author David Graeber

David Graeber (1961–2020) was an American anthropologist, anarchist activist, and author known for his work on social theory, economics, and the anthropology of debt. Graeber taught at Yale University, the London School of Economics, and other institutions, and was an influential voice in the Occupy Wall Street movement.

His research combined rigorous fieldwork with critical analysis of economic and social systems, producing influential works such as Debt: The First 5,000 Years and Bullshit Jobs. Graeber’s writings challenge conventional assumptions about markets, labor, and social hierarchy, emphasizing the moral and cultural dimensions of economics and human cooperation.

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