Look inside

AGE OF MAGICAL OVERTHINKING HB

3.3(30)
Hardcover€25.50Paperback€18.50
Not availableFree shipping
Buy Now

About the book

In the modern information age, our brain's coping mechanisms have been overloaded, and our irrationality turned up to eleven. Amanda Montell blends cultural criticism and personal narrative to explore our modern cognitive biases and the power, disadvantages and highlights of magical overthinking."Magical thinking" can be broadly defined as the belief that one's internal thoughts can affect unrelated events in the external world. Whether that's "manifesting" their way out of poverty, staving off cancer with positive vibes, or transforming an unhealthy relationship to a glorious one through loyalty alone.In a series of razor sharp and introspective chapters, Montell delves into cognitive biases that run rampant in our brains, from how the "halo effect" cultivates worship (and hatred) of larger-than-life celebrities, to how the "sunk cost fallacy" can keep us in detrimental relationships long after they no longer serve us.Told with her signature brilliance and wit, Montell delivers a powerful prevailing message of hope and forgiveness for our anxious human experience. If you ever find yourself struggling, despite your best efforts, to keep faith in our overwhelming information overload, this book will be your guiding light.Now's the time to make sense of the senselessness and refresh our minds. Montell illuminates in the chaos, quieting the havoc, and invites us to listen, as even in the most startling dissonance, there is harmony.

Editions (5)

ISBN9780008701116
PublisherHarper Collins Publishers - UK Wholesale Acct
Publication Date04/11/24
Pages272

Reviews & Ratings

30 ratings

4 reviews

3.3

Tap to filter

  • timur
    timur

    37 Followers

    3.5

    Good read für morgens und in der bahn

    Jul 8, 2025

  • kathistrophe
    kathistrophe

    14 Followers

    2.0

    I really love Amanda Montell. But I do prefer her linguistic works. "The Age of magical Overthinking" is an essay collection about biases e.g. recency bias, Ikea-bias, confirmation bias etc. She starts off each essay by presenting a personal anectode which fits the bias and then continues to tell the reader about the research done in that field. I found most of the chapters hard to follow because Montell doesn't clearly seperate the sections about personal tellings from the ones about facts. I wish she would have structured those chapters more clearly. C

    Jul 22, 2024

  • chaptersandcatnip
    chaptersandcatnip

    19 Followers

    1.0

    Title ≠ Content

    Honestly, this book just wasn’t for me. The title sounded super promising, but the content didn’t match at all. It felt more like a mix of personal stories and random celebrity gossip than an actual exploration of overthinking. I didn’t really get much out of it, and I know the author has written better books. This one just wasn’t it.

    Sep 26, 2025

3 of 4 reviews

Reading is better with the READO app.

Discover books, track progress, read together.

Library

Keep track