Concepts
Powerful Ideas That Change How You Think
Concepts are TinyThat's idea network: mental models, biases, incentives, and thinking tools connected by meaning instead of filed into folders.
Featured Concepts
Start with the ideas that already explain a lot of everyday behavior, work, incentives, and decisions.

MENTAL MODEL
Pareto Principle
The Pareto Principle, also called the 80/20 rule, states that roughly 80% of effects come from 20% of causes. Vilfredo Pareto discovered this pattern in 1896 when he foun...
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MENTAL MODEL
Goodhart's Law
Goodhart's Law, named after British economist Charles Goodhart, states that once a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a useful measure. People optimize for the met...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Survivorship Bias
Survivorship bias is the logical error of focusing on the people or things that 'survived' a selection process while overlooking those that did not. This creates a distor...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Dunning-Kruger Effect
The Dunning-Kruger Effect is a cognitive bias in which people with low competence in a particular domain overestimate their ability. Psychologists David Dunning and Justi...
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MENTAL MODEL
Peter Principle
The Peter Principle, formulated by Dr. Laurence J. Peter in 1969, states that employees in a hierarchy are promoted until they reach a position where they are incompetent...
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MENTAL MODEL
Parkinson's Law
Parkinson's Law, coined by British historian Cyril Northcote Parkinson in 1955, states that work expands to fill the time available for its completion. If you give yourse...
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Concepts become useful when they connect to real problems you keep noticing.
My team is chasing numbers
Success advice feels fake
I keep doubling down
People agree too quickly
I want to think clearer
Start With a Mystery
The best concepts are memorable because they explain something strange.
Why do success stories lie?
Survivorship Bias
You see the winners. The failures quietly disappear from the picture.
Why do metrics ruin behavior?
Goodhart's Law
Turn a measure into a target, and people start gaming the measure.
Why does work fill every deadline?
Parkinson's Law
Give a task more room and it quietly expands into that room.
Why do people seem confidently wrong?
Dunning-Kruger Effect
The less someone knows, the harder it can be to see the gap.
The Concept Network
More than fifty ideas, connected by useful relationships. Open one idea, then follow the neighboring concepts that explain it.
A small share of causes often creates most results.
When a measure becomes a target, it stops being a good measure.
You see the winners while the failures disappear from view.
Low skill can make people worse at judging their own skill.
People rise in organizations until they reach a role they are bad at.
Work expands to fill the time available.
You keep investing because you already invested.
People notice and trust evidence that supports what they already believe.
The more a social indicator is used for control, the more it corrupts the process.
A solution creates incentives that make the problem worse.
A reward structure pushes people toward harmful behavior.
One party acts for another but has different incentives.
People ignore general probabilities when judging a specific case.
A sample misleads because the way it was selected is distorted.
What comes easily to mind feels more common or important.
Reasoning bends toward the conclusion a person wants.
Losses feel more painful than equivalent gains feel good.
Every choice costs the next-best alternative.
People underestimate how long tasks will take.
One positive trait makes everything else look better.
Competent people feel like frauds despite evidence.
Thinking about and judging your own thinking.
Contradictory beliefs or actions create mental discomfort.
Groups suppress dissent and drift into poor decisions.
Shared resources get depleted when individual incentives dominate.
Two actors choose poorly because cooperation is risky.
People take more risk when someone else bears the cost.
A choice creates costs or benefits for others not in the transaction.
People benefit from a resource without contributing to it.
People give extra weight to authority figures.
People infer what is true or right from what others do.
People adopt beliefs or behaviors because they are popular.
People prefer the current state because change feels costly.
People value something more once they own it.
People overvalue things they helped create.
An initial number or idea pulls later judgments toward it.
The way information is presented changes decisions.
People tend to stick with the preselected option.
The design of options changes what people choose.
Small design changes steer behavior without removing choice.
A thing becomes more valuable as more people use it.
A few outcomes are massively larger than the rest.
After a point, extra input produces less extra output.
Break a problem down to basics instead of copying assumptions.
Prefer the simpler explanation when it fits the evidence.
Do not assume malice when error or incompetence explains it.
People overexplain others' behavior by character and underexplain context.
People overestimate how much others notice them.
Extreme outcomes are often followed by more ordinary ones.
People expect small samples to behave like large ones.
People take more risks when they feel more protected.
Actions create effects beyond the intended result.
Corrections can sometimes make beliefs stronger.
Beliefs can persist even after their support is weakened.
Most people privately disagree but think everyone else agrees.
People often contribute less effort inside a group.
Small advantages can compound into dominant outcomes.
Many small outcomes collectively sit behind a few large ones.
Recently Added Concepts
The published library grows from here. Every new article plugs into the existing network instead of standing alone.
ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Long Tail
The long tail is a concept in economics and technology that describes the phenomenon where niche products collectively capture significant v...
Open conceptECONOMIC CONCEPT
Winner-Take-All
Winner-take-all is a market structure where the top performer captures the vast majority of the returns. It is common in industries with net...
Open conceptSOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Pluralistic Ignorance
Pluralistic ignorance is a social phenomenon where everyone privately disagrees but publicly agrees. It was identified by social psychologis...
Open conceptPSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Belief Perseverance
Belief perseverance is the tendency to hold onto beliefs even when the evidence that originally supported them is discredited. It was identi...
Open conceptPSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Backfire Effect
The backfire effect is a cognitive bias where a correction or piece of evidence actually strengthens a person's false belief. It was identif...
Open conceptSOCIAL CONCEPT
What Are Unintended Consequences
Unintended consequences are the unexpected and often negative results of actions. The concept was popularized by sociologist Robert K. Merto...
Open conceptAll Concepts
Browse every idea in the current TinyThat concept library.

PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPT
'God Is Dead'
'God is dead' is a statement by Friedrich Nietzsche. He wrote it in 'The Gay Science' in 1882. It is a warning, not a celebratio...
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PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPT
'I Think, Therefore I Am'
I think, therefore I am' is the famous statement made by French philosopher René Descartes. He wrote it in his 1637 book, 'Disco...
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PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPT
'Man Is Born Free, Yet Everywhere He Is in Chains'
'Man is born free, yet everywhere he is in chains' is the opening line of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's 1762 book, 'The Social Contrac...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Anchoring Effect
The anchoring effect is a cognitive bias where people rely too heavily on the first piece of information they receive (the ancho...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Authority Bias
Authority bias is the tendency to attribute greater credibility to authority figures and follow their lead. It was identified by...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Availability Heuristic
The availability heuristic is a mental shortcut where people overestimate the likelihood of events based on how easily they come...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Backfire Effect
The backfire effect is a cognitive bias where a correction or piece of evidence actually strengthens a person's false belief. It...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Bandwagon Effect
The bandwagon effect is the tendency for people to adopt certain behaviors, styles, or attitudes simply because others are doing...
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STATISTICAL BIAS
Base Rate Fallacy
The base rate fallacy is a cognitive bias where people ignore general statistical information (base rates) in favor of specific,...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Belief Perseverance
Belief perseverance is the tendency to hold onto beliefs even when the evidence that originally supported them is discredited. I...
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RISK CONCEPT
Black Swan Theory
Black Swan Theory is a concept developed by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. A Black Swan is an unpredictable event that has massive conse...
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SOCIAL SCIENCE CONCEPT
Campbell's Law
Campbell's Law states that the more a social indicator is used for decision-making and control, the more it is subject to corrup...
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DECISION MAKING
Chesterton's Fence
Chesterton's Fence is a principle that states: never remove a fence until you know why it was put there. It was articulated by G...
Open concept
BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Choice Architecture
Choice architecture is the design of how choices are presented to decision makers. It is a concept from behavioral economics, po...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Cobra Effect
The Cobra Effect is a situation where an attempted solution to a problem actually makes the problem worse. It was named after an...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Cognitive Dissonance
Cognitive dissonance is the psychological discomfort experienced when holding two or more contradictory beliefs, values, or atti...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Confirmation Bias
Confirmation bias is the tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information that confirms or supports your prior b...
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BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Default Effect
The default effect is the tendency to stick with the preselected option. It is a powerful cognitive bias. The default effect exp...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Dunning-Kruger Effect
The Dunning-Kruger Effect is a cognitive bias in which people with low competence in a particular domain overestimate their abil...
Open concept
BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Endowment Effect
The endowment effect is a cognitive bias where people value things more simply because they own them. It was first identified by...
Open concept
MENTAL MODEL
First Principles Thinking
First principles thinking is a problem-solving approach that involves breaking down a problem to its most basic truths and rebui...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Framing Effect
The framing effect is a cognitive bias where people make different decisions based on how information is presented. It was ident...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Free Rider Problem
The free rider problem is a situation where people benefit from a shared resource without contributing to it. It occurs with pub...
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SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Fundamental Attribution Error
The fundamental attribution error is the tendency to overestimate the role of personal characteristics and underestimate the rol...
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MENTAL MODEL
Goodhart's Law
Goodhart's Law, named after British economist Charles Goodhart, states that once a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a u...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Groupthink
Groupthink is a phenomenon where a group of people makes bad decisions because they prioritize consensus over critical thinking....
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Halo Effect
The halo effect is a cognitive bias where one positive trait creates a halo that influences perceptions of other traits. It was...
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PHILOSOPHICAL PRINCIPLE
Hanlon's Razor
Hanlon's Razor states: never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity. It is a philosophical prin...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Impostor Syndrome
Impostor syndrome is a psychological pattern where high-achieving individuals doubt their accomplishments and fear being exposed...
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MENTAL MODEL
Inversion
Inversion is a mental model that involves thinking about problems backwards. Instead of asking 'how do I succeed?', ask 'what wo...
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STATISTICAL BIAS
Law of Small Numbers
The law of small numbers is the tendency to overgeneralize from small samples. It was identified by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tve...
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STATISTICAL CONCEPT
Lindy Effect
The Lindy Effect is a concept that the future life expectancy of a non-perishable thing is proportional to its current age. For...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Long Tail
The long tail is a concept in economics and technology that describes the phenomenon where niche products collectively capture s...
Open concept
BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Loss Aversion
Loss aversion is a cognitive bias where the pain of losing is psychologically twice as powerful as the pleasure of gaining. It w...
Open concept
PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Metacognition
Metacognition is the ability to think about your own thinking. It involves self-awareness, self-regulation, and reflection. The...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Moral Hazard
Moral hazard is a situation where a person takes more risk because they are protected from the consequences. It is a concept in...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Motivated Reasoning
Motivated reasoning is the tendency to find arguments that support what you already believe. It is a cognitive bias where people...
Open concept
BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Nudge Theory
Nudge theory is a concept in behavioral economics that suggests small, indirect design changes can influence people's behavior....
Open concept
PHILOSOPHICAL PRINCIPLE
Occam's Razor
Occam's Razor is a principle that states that the simplest explanation is usually the correct one. It was formulated by William...
Open concept
ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Opportunity Cost
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative that you give up when you make a choice. It is not the cost you pay....
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MENTAL MODEL
Pareto Principle
The Pareto Principle, also called the 80/20 rule, states that roughly 80% of effects come from 20% of causes. Vilfredo Pareto di...
Open concept
MENTAL MODEL
Parkinson's Law
Parkinson's Law, coined by British historian Cyril Northcote Parkinson in 1955, states that work expands to fill the time availa...
Open concept
MENTAL MODEL
Peter Principle
The Peter Principle, formulated by Dr. Laurence J. Peter in 1969, states that employees in a hierarchy are promoted until they r...
Open concept
COGNITIVE BIAS
Planning Fallacy
The planning fallacy is the tendency to underestimate how long a task will take, how much it will cost, and what can go wrong. I...
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SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Pluralistic Ignorance
Pluralistic ignorance is a social phenomenon where everyone privately disagrees but publicly agrees. It was identified by social...
Open concept
STATISTICAL CONCEPT
Power Law
The power law is a statistical distribution where a small number of events account for a large proportion of the total. It is a...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Principal-Agent Problem
The principal-agent problem occurs when one party (the agent) acts on behalf of another (the principal) but has different incent...
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GAME THEORY
Prisoner's Dilemma
The prisoner's dilemma is a classic game theory problem that demonstrates why two rational people might not cooperate, even when...
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STATISTICAL CONCEPT
Regression to the Mean
Regression to the mean is a statistical phenomenon where extreme results tend to be followed by more average results. It was fir...
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DECISION MAKING
Second-Order Thinking
Second-order thinking is the practice of considering the consequences of consequences. First-order thinking is about the immedia...
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STATISTICAL BIAS
Selection Bias
Selection bias is a bias introduced when the sample you study is not representative of the population you want to understand. It...
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PHILOSOPHICAL PARADOX
Ship of Theseus
The Ship of Theseus is a philosophical paradox that questions the nature of identity. It asks: if a ship has all of its parts re...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Social Proof
Social proof is the tendency to follow what others do. It is a psychological phenomenon where people copy the actions of others...
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PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPT
Spotlight Effect
The spotlight effect is the tendency to overestimate how much others notice you and your actions. It was identified by Thomas Gi...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Status Quo Bias
Status quo bias is the tendency to prefer the current state of affairs. It is a cognitive bias that makes change feel risky and...
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COGNITIVE BIAS
Sunk Cost Fallacy
The sunk cost fallacy is the tendency to continue investing in something because of past investment, even when the future costs...
Open concept
COGNITIVE BIAS
Survivorship Bias
Survivorship bias is the logical error of focusing on the people or things that 'survived' a selection process while overlooking...
Open concept
ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Tragedy of the Commons
The tragedy of the commons is a situation where individuals acting independently in their own self-interest deplete a shared res...
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PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPT
Unexamined Life
The unexamined life is not worth living, according to Socrates. He made this statement during his trial in ancient Athens in 399...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
What Are Diminishing Returns
Diminishing returns is a concept in economics where adding more of one input, while holding others constant, eventually produces...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
What Are Externalities
Externalities are the hidden costs or benefits of economic activity that affect people who did not choose to be affected. They a...
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BUSINESS CONCEPT
What Are Network Effects
Network effects occur when a product or service becomes more valuable as more people use it. The classic example is the telephon...
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ECONOMIC CONCEPT
What Are Perverse Incentives
Perverse incentives are incentives that produce unintended, harmful consequences. They occur when a reward structure encourages...
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SOCIAL CONCEPT
What Are Unintended Consequences
Unintended consequences are the unexpected and often negative results of actions. The concept was popularized by sociologist Rob...
Open concept
ECONOMIC CONCEPT
Winner-Take-All
Winner-take-all is a market structure where the top performer captures the vast majority of the returns. It is common in industr...
Open concept