
Think Like a Freak
by Steven D. Levitt · 2014
Steven D. Levitt's take on self-improvement, the honest verdict is below.
Worth reading? The Freakonomics duo teach their problem-solving mindset directly. Fun and useful for retraining how you frame questions; skip if you've already read their other books, since the flavor overlaps heavily.
| Author | Steven D. Levitt |
|---|---|
| Published | 2014 |
| Category | Self-Improvement & Psychology |
The Verdict
The Freakonomics duo teach their problem-solving mindset directly. Fun and useful for retraining how you frame questions; skip if you’ve already read their other books, since the flavor overlaps heavily.
anyone weighing whether Think Like a Freak belongs on their self-improvement and psychology shelf
you want a different angle than Steven D. Levitt's

Top 9 Lessons from Think Like a Freak
- Say 'I don't know' instead of faking an answer.
- Redefine the actual problem before solving it.
- Follow the incentives to understand behavior.
- Think like a child: ask obvious, unafraid questions.
- Small, cheap experiments beat big untested bets.
- Correlation isn't causation; check what really drives outcomes.
- Attack root causes, not symptoms.
- Know how and when to quit; sunk costs lie to you.
- Persuading people who don't want to be persuaded is nearly impossible.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Think Like a Freak worth reading?
Yes if you want a fun toolkit for reframing problems. Skip if the earlier Freakonomics books already covered it for you.
What is the main idea of Think Like a Freak?
Retrain your thinking: question assumptions, follow incentives, run experiments, and admit what you don't know.
Who should read Think Like a Freak?
Curious problem-solvers who enjoy counterintuitive, data-driven thinking.
Ready to read it?
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