Judgment Is Bounded

Categories
Decision Making
Sources
How Complex Systems Fail, Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness, Thinking, Fast and Slow, Thinking in Systems

Human judgment runs on limited information and fast, automatic heuristics, producing errors that are systematic and predictable rather than random. Robust systems and decisions are designed to account for bounded, biased judgment instead of assuming rational actors.

Reinforced By

Why it Matters

Thinking in Systems says actors decide rationally on the limited information their position provides, so blaming individuals misses the structure. Thinking, Fast and Slow shows the limits are also cognitive: intuition substitutes easy questions for hard ones and treats the available evidence as the whole picture. How Complex Systems Fail adds that our judgment of failure is itself warped by hindsight. Nudge turns the premise into a design program: because real "Humans" are not rational "Econs," choice architecture should help them through defaults and framing while preserving freedom to choose. Across these domains the lesson is the same: do not assume rational, fully informed actors; design decisions, defaults, and systems to fit how people actually judge.

Tension

Accounting for bias can slide into treating people as merely irrational, ignoring that the same fast judgment is indispensable and often well adapted. The goal is to support and correct judgment at the points it fails, not to distrust it wholesale.