Description
Uncover the dangerous cognitive bias that makes experts force their favorite solutions onto completely unrelated problems. If you give a toddler a hammer, suddenly everything in the living room needs pounding. We laugh at this childish simplicity, yet highly paid executives, brilliant software engineers, and experienced doctors fall into this exact same psychological trap every single day.Coined by Abraham Maslow, the "Law of the Instrument" dictates that humans have an overwhelming cognitive bias toward using the tools they are most familiar with, regardless of whether they fit the problem. A financial analyst will try to solve a cultural issue with a spreadsheet. A surgeon will view every ailment as an operative issue. We bend the reality of the problem to justify the use of our favorite solution, leading to disastrous misdiagnoses in both medicine and corporate strategy.This book dissects the fascinating psychology of our intellectual blind spots. It explores historical disasters caused by over-reliance on a single paradigm, and exposes how modern hyperspecialization is actually making us worse at complex problem-solving.Stop forcing your favorite solutions onto nuanced problems. Learn how to recognize the Law of the Instrument in your own thinking, diversify your mental models, and build an intellectual toolkit that adapts to reality.



