Priceless: The Myth of Fair Value (and How to Take Advantage of It)

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Product Details
Price
$19.00  $17.67
Publisher
Hill & Wang
Publish Date
Pages
352
Dimensions
5.59 X 8.25 X 0.96 inches | 0.69 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780809078813

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About the Author

William Poundstone is the author of two previous Hill and Wang books: Fortune's Formula and Gaming the Vote.

Reviews

"Priceless is an instructive and entertaining romp through the hits of recent research on decision making, which will leave you amused, smarter, and wondering about what money and prices really mean." --Daniel Kahneman, professor emeritus, Princeton University, and winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Economics

"A powerful argument that should be a wake-up call to everyone who still subscribes to the old model of economics." --Dan Ariely, author of Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions

"Poundstone has managed to write a book that is fun to read and yet well-researched and substantive. Without a minute of suffering the reader gets to know nearly all the key contributors to the science of decision making. Recommended for anyone who has to make decisions." --Richard H. Thaler, coauthor (with Cass R. Sunstein) of Nudge: Improving Decisions on Health, Wealth and Happiness

"The psychology of prices is, to an extent, the psychology of life, and thus the lessons of Priceless are indeed life lessons. Poundstone's lively descriptions of the irrational quirks that characterize our behavior are engaging and enlightening. Take it with you when you're thinking of buying (or selling) something. It might save you a bundle." --John Allen Paulos, author of Innumeracy: Mathematical Illiteracy and Its Consequences and Irreligion: A Mathematician Explains Why the Arguments for God Just Don't Add Up

"If you can get this book for under $100, grab it! After you read it, you will better understand why the price you paid felt like a bargain." --Max Bazerman, professor of business administration, Harvard Business School, and coauthor of Judgment in Managerial Decision Making

"Much of behavioral economics . . . has focused on the seemingly crazy ways in which people and prices interact. In his new book Priceless, William Poundstone offers a thoroughly accessible and enjoyable tour of this research . . . Poundstone is an engaging intellectual historian who traces the development of behavioral economics from its roots in the 1960s discipline called psychophysics, an offshoot of psychology . . . It was more than century ago that Oscar Wilde famously observed that 'people know the price of everything and the value of nothing.' In Priceless, we now have the proof." --Steven Pearlstine, Washington Post

"Pricing is a richer subject than you might imagine. The smile that creeps onto your face when a shameless marketing gambit reminds you of something you read in Poundstone's book? Priceless." --Peter Coy, Business Week

"[Poundstone] makes complicated economic and psychological concepts palatable by using a numble, colloquial style in refreshingly short chapters . . . Dozens of fascinating topics are explored . . . At the end you will be left wondering what money and prices really mean--the dizzying quirky irrational sort of wonder that Alice found in 'Wonderland.'" --Roger Miller, The Denver Post

"Bright analysis of the psychology of pricing . . . readable and revealing." --Kirkus Reviews