EFTA02436478.pdf
dataset_11 pdf 134.1 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 2 pages
To: Jeffrey Epstein[jeevacation©gmail.com]
From: John Brockman
Sent: Sat 8/29/2009 3:36:16 PM
Subject: call 203-266-5930
Eastover Farm
I'm here. Kahneman is visiting as is Sendhil Mullaination.
We're selling Sendhil's book (coauthored with Eldar Shafir) next week.
See below (confidential please).
mobile
John Brockman
Edge Foundation, Inc.
5 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022
Visit the EDGE Website:
http://www.edge.org
The Packing Problem: Time, Money, and the Science of Scarcity By Sendhil
Mullainathan & Eldar Shafir
The economist Sendhil Mullainathan and the psychologist Eldar Shafir are stars
in their respective disciplines, and the combination is greater than the sum of
its parts. Their project has a unique feel to
it: it is the finest combination of heart and head that I have seen in our
field. Together they manage to merge scientific rigor and a wry view of the
human predicament with a passionate commitment to deepen our understanding of
the psychology and economics of poverty and to motivate us all to do better.
—Daniel Kahneman, Professor of Psychology, Princeton University; Recipient,
2002 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences
Sendhil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir are a powerhouse duo. I consider Sendhil
to be the most interesting young economist in the world. He can do anything,
from abstract theory to field experiments in poor, rural India. Eldar Shafir is
the most brilliant psychologist in the field of judgment and decision making to
come along since Kahneman and Tversky. Both of them are amazingly personable
and articulate. You can't ask for a better combination of authors to present
their ideas to the public.
—Richard Thaler, the father of Behavioral Economics; Director, Center for
Decision Research, University of Chicago Graduate School of Business; Coauthor
(with Cass Sunstein), Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and
Happiness.
Sendhil Mullainathan is a brilliant young economist who is tackling some of the
most important questions in economics. Why do poor people often make choices
that keep them poor? Why do some busy people make choices that keep them too
busy? Both questions involve decision making under real or perceived scarcity.
Classical economics assumes people are entirely rational actors, and thus has
no answer to these puzzles. Sendhil is expanding the new field of behavior
EFTA_R1_01508995
EFTA02436478
economics to analyze these questions, with profound impact on both our academic
understanding of economics and public policy.
—Nathan Myhrvold is CEO of Intellectual Ventures. Previously Dr.
Myhrvold was Chief Technical Officer of Microsoft Corporation and founder of
Microsoft Research where he worked directly for Bill Gates, with whom he
coauthored The Road Ahead.
EFTA_R1_01508996
EFTA02436479
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- 38c1b368-c6f2-4140-afc1-8ea7498cf03f
- Storage Key
- dataset_11/EFTA02436478.pdf
- Content Hash
- 0efb364c2c8afa2b7645211f9ee8af7f
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026