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Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.5 out of 5 stars 13,816 ratings

The landmark book that has revolutionized the way we understand leadership and decision making - from number-one best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell.

In his landmark best seller The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwell redefined how we understand the world around us. Now, in Blink, he revolutionizes the way we understand the world within. Blink is a book about how we think without thinking, about choices that seem to be made in an instant, in the blink of an eye, that actually aren't as simple as they seem. Why are some people brilliant decision makers, while others are consistently inept? Why do some people follow their instincts and win, while others end up stumbling into error? How do our brains really work, in the office, in the classroom, in the kitchen, and in the bedroom? And why are the best decisions often those that are impossible to explain to others?

In Blink we meet the psychologist who has learned to predict whether a marriage will last, based on a few minutes of observing a couple; the tennis coach who knows when a player will double-fault before the racket even makes contact with the ball; the antiquities experts who recognize a fake at a glance. Here, too, are great failures of "blink": the election of Warren Harding; "New Coke"; and the shooting of Amadou Diallo by police. Blink reveals that great decision makers aren't those who process the most information or spend the most time deliberating, but those who have perfected the art of "thin-slicing", filtering the very few factors that matter from an overwhelming number of variables.

Drawing on cutting-edge neuroscience and psychology and displaying all of the brilliance that made The Tipping Point a classic, Blink changes the way you understand every decision you make. Never again will you think about thinking the same way.

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Product details

Listening Length 7 hours and 44 minutes
Author Malcolm Gladwell
Narrator Malcolm Gladwell
Whispersync for Voice Ready
Audible.com Release Date April 05, 2005
Publisher Hachette Audio
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B00097DWY0
Best Sellers Rank

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4.5 out of 5 stars
13,816 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and entertaining, with great insights and compelling analysis. The writing style translates complex concepts into readable prose, making it easy to understand. However, several customers note that the book is repetitive and sometimes boring.

830 customers mention "Readability"786 positive44 negative

Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a very interesting and enjoyable read with engaging stories that can be read repeatedly.

"...Read BLINK, and find out how and why. This book is FASCINATING, and NOT TO BE PUT DOWN, ONCE YOU START READING IT. Richard Stoyeck" Read more

"...Once again, Malcolm Gladwell gathers up a collection of fascinating tales, linking them together to help illustrate an idea...." Read more

"...This was a fascinating book that does not pretend to give all the answers but does raise some really good questions about a mysterious and important..." Read more

"...Blink has proven to be a very interesting book (as it should be – it's won many awards) and is definitely worth reading." Read more

733 customers mention "Insight"650 positive83 negative

Customers find the book insightful and thought-provoking, with one customer specifically noting how it explores the complexity of human cognition and how we make decisions subconsciously.

"...instances where people in just the time it takes to BLINK, can make FABULOUS decisions that turn out to be the right ones...." Read more

"...the ability of a great general to look at a battle field, weed through all the information, and make a rapid decision; he gives a great example of..." Read more

"...true stories/anecdotes to prove that we can, in fact, effectively make quick snap judgments. Take Gladwell’s story in the introduction for example...." Read more

"...The overall theme is "Thinking without Thinking," which describes that ones mind can subconsciously understand and analyze a situation before one's..." Read more

270 customers mention "Writing style"256 positive14 negative

Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it easy to read and well-written, with the author successfully translating complex concepts into accessible prose.

"...This was a very encouraging message for me. It has to be taken along with the many other depressing messages here...." Read more

"...Along the book there is a Gladwell signature everywhere, the language is clear and direct, the message is relevant...." Read more

"...LOVED it. I bought it and discovered a new favorite author, one who I still read today, after more than twenty years and through a dozen books...." Read more

"...(without actually using the terminology of many of them) to make it readable and useable for the general public...." Read more

60 customers mention "Repetition"3 positive57 negative

Customers find the book repetitive and sometimes boring, with too many stories that don't keep their interest.

"...There is a lot of redundancy within and across chapters, and I estimate the book could be maybe 100 pages lighter...." Read more

"...the stories appeared more interesting, but the book sidetracked to other irrelevant topics...." Read more

"A terrible collection of cherry picked anecdotes and conflicting data, all carefully laid out to appeal to the instant gratification of the human..." Read more

"...of the great writing and story-telling from this book, but not the useful conclusion." Read more

Thinking about Thinking
5 out of 5 stars
Thinking about Thinking
Gladwell, M. (2005). Blink: The power of thinking without thinking. Little, Brown and Co. Malcolm Gladwell is an author and cofounder of Pushkin Industries, an audio content company that produces Revisionist History podcast, which reconsiders things both overlooked and misunderstood, and Broken Record, where he, Rick Rubin, and Bruce Headlam interview musicians across a wide range of genres. Drawing upon memory and expertise, we can draw conclusions about a situation quickly. A conscious decision-making strategy might be where we logically work through a scenario based on prior learning and possible outcomes to make a decision. In contrast, this book is about instantaneous decision making made in the blink of an eye. An instantaneous strategy "operates entirely below the surface of consciousness." Our brains use thin slicing, the ability to find patterns in events based only on minimal experience, to quickly decide a situation. Our adaptive unconscious, Gladwell noted is "a kind of giant computer that quickly and quietly processes a lot of the data we need in order to keep functioning as human beings." Processing occurs in the blink of an eye, such that without thinking, we have a hunch, a conclusion, an observation. As Gladwell noted, while "the adaptive unconscious does an excellent job of sizing up the world" it can be wrong because it's influenced (corrupted?) by a person's likes, dislikes, prejudices, and stereotypes. Gladwell uses stories, research, and case studies to explore the topic and undergird his thesis.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2007
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    If you wanted to sum up Malcolm Gladwell's "Blink", I would tell you to see the very first "Star Wars" movie. Remember in 1977 when Luke Skywalker while piloting his fighter hears Obi-Wan Kenobi tell him to turn off his radar while attacking the evil star ship? Obi-Wan wants Luke to rely on the FORCE. In other words, give up his conscious thought patterns and go with your gut.

    This is what BLINK is all about. Our ability to instantly know what is real from what is fiction. What is good from what is bad? Gladwell is telling us to go with our right (creative) brain, and for the moment to shut down our left (logical, analytical) brain, and oh he is so right.

    In example after example, the author goes through diverse instances where people in just the time it takes to BLINK, can make FABULOUS decisions that turn out to be the right ones. Others using the power of their analytical minds can take days, weeks, and even months, and come to the wrong decision. There's something going on here, and Gladwell is onto it. Human beings have five million years of evolutionary history behind us, and consciousness for only the last 15,000 or 20,000 years.

    Somehow, we have TURNED OFF the power of our unconscious instinctual patterns, and overridden them with our super analytical ways of logic. The result is inferior decisions to what we had before we became conscious. Hey, when a lion was chasing down our ancestors for a meal, you didn't have much time to think.

    By the way, every page of this relatively short book is fascinating. You will literally not be able to put it down. Let's look at a few of the topics that Gladwell covers in depth and convincingly.

    A) The J. Paul Getty Museum & the Kouros Statue

    The cash-flushed Getty Museum wanted to buy a 7-foot Greek statue for $10 million. With contract in hand they call in some of the greatest experts in the world who after running exhaustive scientific tests, agree that it's the real thing and you should jump to buy it. At the same time a handful of other experts just looking at the object instantly announce it's a fake, and you should walk away. Learn who was right and why. Hint: it took 2 seconds of looking to KNOW the answer.

    B) Who's a good Professor in less than 30 seconds

    Remember when we went to college we would attend a lecture or two to determine if we wanted to take the entire course with a certain professor. In BLINK you will see scientific studies that prove you can come to the same decision by watching a video of the professor for 30 seconds. Who's kidding whom?

    C) What if you could tell how long a potential marriage would last?

    This one is mind blowing. John Gottman of the University of Washington has shown in tests that he can do this with accuracy. Watching one hour of a couple talking, and Gottman can tell with 95% accuracy if 15 years later, they will still be married. Blink goes into it in detail. Too bad, I didn't learn about this study sooner.

    D) Why do some doctors get sued, and others not at all?

    You would think that the risk of being sued if you are a doctor is all about making mistakes, or improper medical care. BLINK shows that its really about words like "RUSHED, IGNORED, and TREATED POORLY."

    E) Can a President of the United States be elected on looks alone?

    Read BLINK and you will see how an entire nation got suckered into electing Warren Warding President just for that reason, unbelievable but true. Read how and why, and be mesmerized.

    F) Only 14.5% of men are six feet and over. Why are 58% of CEO's six feet, or taller?

    Pretty wild when you think about it, yet true. Could there be some kind of unwritten or unconscious criteria for being a Fortune 500 CEO that involves height? There aren't enough tall people to COMPLETELY staff any one company. Why is it that the tall ones seem to rise to the TOP?

    G) Blue Team versus Red Team

    This is my personal favorite. The American military runs war games all the time. The good guys who are us are always the BLUE Team. The enemy is always the RED team. In preparation for the first Iraq war in the early 1990's, the government ran the exercise, and put General Paul Van Riper in charge of the bad guys, the RED team.

    The bottom line is that the bad guys blew away the good guys, the Americans by using unconventional "BLINK" type thinking, while the BLUE Team relied on conventional, overwhelming force, and inside the Beltway type bureaucratic thinking. This illustrates why this book is so important. You will learn out of the box type thinking.

    You will also learn when to use it, and when to go with your logical left brain type thinking. By the way in the war exercise when the bad guys, the RED Team beat the good guys the BLUE Team with ease, what did the Pentagon do? They announced that the game would be done over again, and they outlawed the techniques that the bad guys the RED Team employed.

    The result, the good guys won. The problem is that nobody told the bad guys in Iraq during the second Iraq War that these techniques were outlawed, and thus our Generals as usual find themselves in some difficulty to say the least. Read BLINK, and find out how and why. This book is FASCINATING, and NOT TO BE PUT DOWN, ONCE YOU START READING IT.

    Richard Stoyeck
    93 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2007
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Blink follows in the footsteps of The Tipping Point. Once again, Malcolm Gladwell gathers up a collection of fascinating tales, linking them together to help illustrate an idea. In Blink, that idea is that our subconscious, in only a few seconds, can make extremely accurate decisions. It's not intuition - Malcolm deliberately does not use the word intuition and explains this at the end of the book. Intuition is about gut, emotional reactions. Instead, Malcolm explains that the blink factor is when our extremely well trained subconscious zips through a decision for us.

    He gives many examples of how this works. Trained experts looking at a statue can tell immediately it's a forgery. Food experts can nibble an Oreo and tell which factory it was made in. Marriage experts can listen to a couple talk for only a few minutes and predict - with extremely high accuracy - if the pair will survive long term. It's not an emotional response. It's a lightning-fact summary of the training that the individuals have undergone.

    What then follows is to look at situations which don't involve specific training - i.e. human relationships. Every human, from the time they are born, are immersed in a 24-hour-a-day learning lab of how to get along with others. They learn facial movements, tone of voice, and much more to figure out how to relate to others. Malcolm specifically mentions autism and how individuals with this syndrome lack that skill - and how it affects their daily functioning. So each of us is educated from birth on how to act and react to others - and that becomes a subconscious talent.

    But is it a good thing? Because we learn and encapsulate all of this without any real conscious thought, we also bring into our brain all the prejudices and slants that are around us. Early in the 1900s, many people were POSITIVE that women could not play instruments as well as men could. Most orchestras were primarily male (with perhaps a female harpist). Even when women auditioned, they were judged to be not as good. Then, for a fluke reason, a set of candidates were auditioned behind a screen, and a female won. Simply by bringing in screens to shield the player's identity during the testing period, many orchestras are now 50% female. No quotas to fill, no arguing with maestros over "be more fair". They set up the testing so only the music could be evaluated - and suddenly it was.

    This was a very encouraging message for me. It has to be taken along with the many other depressing messages here. Studies where they sent men and women, black and white, into car dealerships - with the individuals dressed almost identically and presenting the exact same educational background and home street - had the car salesmen treating the white men MUCH better than the black men in terms of price quoted. Even when the sales reps felt they were being fair. It was innate in the rep's "sizing up" of the person before them, how gullible they were. Other studies with words and photos show that even people who feel they are extremely fair in racial situations still have a built in bias. The studies are in the book, so you can take the tests yourself and see how you do.

    Still, the first step in overcoming an issue is to know it is out there. If your subconscious is having you make a snap decision about someone you meet, it's good to be aware that is going on and to take steps to fix it. I really wish the book had gone more into that phase. It's fine to list example after example of snap judgements and how they can be bad and good. But if you lay them out and say "these exist and it's important to understand and guide them" - the logical next step would be to talk about HOW to do those things. The book leaves you hanging.

    Maybe Malcolm has plans for a third book, and figures everyone who read book 2 would then be required to get book 3 ...
    11 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Gera
    5.0 out of 5 stars Figo
    Reviewed in Italy on February 25, 2018
    Bel libro, interessante. Aiuta a capire come funziona la prima impressione. Lo consiglio a chiunque sia interessato ai meccanismi del cervello!
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  • GSS
    5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating, edifying and profound
    Reviewed in Australia on September 11, 2022
    Malcolm Gladwell explores how we make decisions, especially snap decisions and comes to some very interesting and profound conclusions.

    As an analytical sort of person I tend to rely on gathering as much information as possible before making a decision, and then still taking my time about it. The book shows that sometimes we can have too much information and that sometimes the snap judgements, aided by extensive experience, can be more accurate.

    Gladwell also looks at how instinctive judgements can be badly lead, the causes for these and the sort of unwanted results, even tragedies, this can lead to. His conclusion sets out ways we can overcome biases caused by these conditioned judgements.

    This all done in Gladwell’s incredibly engaging style of wonderfully spun true stories that illustrate something profound. Even if you learn nothing from the book, it’s worth reading it just the cases and stories and how he tells them.

    All in all, it’s wonderfully enthralling and thought-provoking reading.
  • Kirk Bailey
    5.0 out of 5 stars Love Malcolm Gladwell's books
    Reviewed in Canada on August 14, 2020
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    When reading a Gladwell book, and I have most of his books, the research that he puts into them is clearly obvious. He is an incredible writer. He should win a Pulitzer or Nobel Prize or both for his very readable and very informative books. I am a retired University Professor and if I were still teaching, I would find a way to include some of Malcolm Gladwell's book into the curriculum of some of the Business School courses in Management that I taught both in the BComm and MBA level courses. His books would be very worthy of being added to a Business School Curriculum. I would guess they would quickly become student favourites. I'll bet students would say they learned much from his books!
  • S Dutta
    5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome Book
    Reviewed in India on August 2, 2024
    This book is completely gripping through the entire duration. Absolutely worth a read for anyone who loves a unique book.
  • H. Sebastian
    5.0 out of 5 stars How powerful (and easily be fooled) is your subconcious mind
    Reviewed in Germany on August 4, 2023
    Being a great fan of „outliers“ by the same author I was really curious about „blink“ which means the incredible power of subconscious mind which is doing a lot for each and everyone of us everyday. The first part of the book exactly does this: presenting what a well trained subconscious mind can do, how it influences us everyday, how it leads our decisions and how often we do not know why we decide how we decide (and often do so correctly) – using tons of very illustrative examples and stories. The second part of the book goes into detail on how easy our very powerful subconscious can be (easily) fooled – and that we even fall into the same traps every time, again by presenting examples and stories out of real life. This awesome book is closed with a wonderful lessons learned chapter on what can be taken out of this book.
    Clear, well to understand language, great examples, available online material, detailed notes and index section make the book a great read which enables the interested read to dig deeper into this awesome topic. Recommend this book for readers who want to understand more about themselves as well as their environment, read this! It will turn some of your learnings upside down. 5 Stars.
    Customer image
    H. Sebastian
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    How powerful (and easily be fooled) is your subconcious mind

    Reviewed in Germany on August 4, 2023
    Being a great fan of „outliers“ by the same author I was really curious about „blink“ which means the incredible power of subconscious mind which is doing a lot for each and everyone of us everyday. The first part of the book exactly does this: presenting what a well trained subconscious mind can do, how it influences us everyday, how it leads our decisions and how often we do not know why we decide how we decide (and often do so correctly) – using tons of very illustrative examples and stories. The second part of the book goes into detail on how easy our very powerful subconscious can be (easily) fooled – and that we even fall into the same traps every time, again by presenting examples and stories out of real life. This awesome book is closed with a wonderful lessons learned chapter on what can be taken out of this book.
    Clear, well to understand language, great examples, available online material, detailed notes and index section make the book a great read which enables the interested read to dig deeper into this awesome topic. Recommend this book for readers who want to understand more about themselves as well as their environment, read this! It will turn some of your learnings upside down. 5 Stars.
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