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The Age of Magical Overthinking

Notes on Modern Irrationality

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The Age of Magical Overthinking

By: Amanda Montell
Narrated by: Amanda Montell
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About this listen

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's prevailing message is one of hope and forgiveness for our anxiety riddled human self. If you have all but lost faith in our ability to reason through the noise of information overload, this book aims to make sense of the senseless. To crack open a window in our minds and let the fresh air in. To help quiet the cacophony for a while, and maybe, even hear a melody in it.

©2024 Amanda Montell (P)2024 HarperCollins Publishers Limited
Editors Select Social Psychology & Interactions Social Sciences Thought-Provoking
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Editorial Review

You’ll never look at a horoscope the same way again
I don’t believe in astrology, the law of attraction or (most) conspiracy theories – but that doesn’t stop me from being obsessed with how many people do. And why not? Such supernatural thinking is practically de rigueur. Author, linguist and podcast host Amanda Montell, writer of nonfiction hits Cultish and Wordslut, has a way with these topics, and her bracing take on today’s stickiest irrational beliefs – from influencer-peddled therapy speak to celebrity worship and positive thinking – might be her most brilliant yet. Drawing you in with personal stories, expert insights and several cocktail parties’ worth of fun facts, Montell gradually reveals how the cognitive biases behind popular delusions spare no one, including her, me and, yes, you. An infectious and engaging reader of her own work, Montell infuses The Age of Magical Overthinking with humour and passion, ensuring both die-hard skeptics and woo-woo acolytes will find something to love and learn within. —Kat J., Audible Editor

What listeners say about The Age of Magical Overthinking

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I love Amanda Montell. Witty, entertaining well researched and a joy to read about cognitive biases, my favourite topic

Excellent 10/10 read this it is brilliant such an important topic that should be more widely known.

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Absolutely brilliant

I adored this book! So interesting and intelligently written. The perfect blend of research and personal anecdotes.

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Montell does it again

Amanda is an expert in weaving grounded research with popular zeitgeist, relatable experience and poetic license. Don’t be fooled by the breezy - chat over a glass of something nice - delivery. She packs a punch and gives you something to think about for some time after. Whilst listening I’ve run to find pen and paper several time to jot down academic research she has referenced that chimed with my own thinking or relatable to something going on for someone in my life. Witty, accessible, smart and relevant. It’s a yes from me.

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Binged in one day

An engaging and thought-provoking read for those of us prone to overthinking. This book examines topics such as confirmation bias, romanticising the past, celebrity culture, toxic relationships, sunk cost fallacy, and manifestation. It offers an entertaining discussion of these things that we all tend to do. I devoured this book all in one go.

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Wonderful

Truely wonderful and insightful, I couldn’t stop listening and kinda just wanna play it again. I’ve enjoyed all Amanda’s books and podcasts but I think what sets this one apart is you can really feel her passion and it’s incredibly personal- thank you for putting this out into the world.

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Interesting and thoughtful

I loved Montell’s previous books and was super excited about this release.
I feel that this hopped about quite a bit and I wasn’t gripped as much as I was by her other publications. But I liked it nonetheless.

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brilliant!

This is the first book I've actually finished in ages! Insightful, empathic, optimistic...and Amanda loves my favourite show (Six Feet Under), so she clearly has excellent taste

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A marvellous tour around your own biases

Fascinating, intriguing, accessible. Amanda gives modern online women a whistle stop tour of logical fallacies and congitive bias. really enjoyed it.

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Personal stories trying to be of substance

Dear oh dear. This book is really a series of articles strung together that has the merest most tenuous connections. It is something to read in a magazine on a long flight. It barely scratches the surface. And I had to laugh when someone had written it was well researched. Just cherry-picking quotes from another source does not equal research. There is also the cringe reference to her partner as the love of her life and I wish them every joy and happiness but in a book like this to be taken in any way seriously there’s no need to mention it.
It needs much more substance strong research and less personal anecdotes that are not revealing of anything fresh relevant to her but has little value to a wider audience. If you truly want to know about cognitive biases this is not the place to gain knowledge.

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Disjointed mess

This book is extremely disjointed. Much more of a memoir than a science book. It lacks scientific rigour and most of the topics explored are barely scratching the surface. I really wished it went in more depth, rather and talking so much about her own anecdotes. The writer sounds a bit out of touch, and very LA. Maybe good only for the podcast aficionados, but if you really want to learn about cognitive bias beyond sound bites, I think you should stir away from this book.

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1 person found this helpful