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Risk Intelligence: How to Live with Uncertainty

by Dylan Evans (2012)

Quick summary - an in-depth PhD-level extended summary (10-30 pages) for this book is coming soon.

Risk Intelligence: How to Live with Uncertainty

Author: Dylan Evans Categories: Trading Psychology, Risk Management

Quick Summary

Evans introduces the concept of "risk intelligence" as the ability to estimate probabilities accurately, arguing this is a vital but neglected life skill. Drawing on psychology of judgment research, the book examines why people systematically miscalibrate probabilities (overconfidence, underconfidence), how professional gamblers and intelligence analysts develop superior probabilistic thinking, and how anyone can improve their risk intelligence quotient.

Detailed Summary

Dylan Evans's Risk Intelligence (2012, Free Press/Atlantic Books) proposes that the ability to accurately estimate probabilities -- what Evans terms "risk intelligence" or RQ -- is a distinct cognitive skill that varies widely across individuals and professions, and is largely independent of traditional IQ measures.

The book opens with four illustrative vignettes: a detective who calibrates her confidence in lie detection (high RQ), an investment banker who is contrarian when others are certain and confident when others panic (high RQ), a serial romantic who always estimates 90-95% probability of lasting love (low RQ, overconfident), and a military officer who consistently underestimates his own judgment despite being usually correct (low RQ, underconfident).

Chapter by chapter, Evans builds a framework for understanding risk intelligence. He explores how to discover your own Risk Quotient through calibration tests (where you estimate probability ranges for factual questions and compare your confidence levels to actual accuracy). He examines the "Twilight Zone" -- the vast space of uncertainty between confident knowledge and confident ignorance -- where risk intelligence operates.

"Tricks of the Mind" catalogues the cognitive biases that undermine probabilistic thinking: anchoring, the availability heuristic, base rate neglect, confirmation bias, and the illusion of control. "The Madness of Crowds" extends this to group-level failures of risk intelligence, including herding, groupthink, and information cascades.

The chapters on "Thinking by Numbers" and "Weighing the Probable" introduce practical techniques for improving probabilistic reasoning, including Bayesian updating, reference class forecasting, and decomposition methods. "How to Gamble and Win" examines professional gamblers, poker players, and sports bettors as exemplars of high risk intelligence, analyzing their methods for estimating probabilities and managing uncertainty.

The final chapter, "Knowing What You Know," synthesizes the book's insights into a framework for meta-cognition -- understanding the limits of your own knowledge as the foundation of intelligent risk-taking. The appendices include a formal Risk Intelligence Test and a Personal Prediction Test for readers to assess and develop their own probabilistic calibration.

For traders, the book's relevance is direct: every trading decision is fundamentally a probability estimate, and the quality of those estimates determines long-term profitability.

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