Fool Proof, Tess WilkinsonRyan
Fool Proof, Tess WilkinsonRyan
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Fool Proof
How Fear of Playing the Sucker Shapes Our Selves and the Social Order—and What We Can Do About It

Author: Tess Wilkinson-Ryan

Narrator: Mia Barron

Unabridged: 9 hr 15 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Harper

Published: 02/07/2023

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

The fear of playing the fool is a universal psychological phenomenon and an underappreciated driver of human behavior; in the spirit of Malcolm Gladwell’s Blink, Dan Ariely’s Predictably Irrational, and Susan Cain’s Quiet, Fool Proof tracks the implications of the sucker construct from personal choices to cultural conflict, ultimately charting an unexpected and empowering path forward.In the American moral vernacular, we have a whole thesaurus for victims of exploitation. They are suckers (born every minute), fools (not suffered gladly), dupes, marks, chumps, pawns, and losers. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. Cultural stories about suckers abound too: the Trojan Horse, the Boy Who Cried Wolf, the Emperor’s New Clothes, even Hansel and Gretel. If you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you. Don’t go out with him; he only wants one thing. The fear of playing the fool is not just a descriptive fact; it is a prescriptive theme: Don’t let that be you. Most of us are constantly navigating two sets of imperatives: how to be successful and how to be good. The fear of being suckered whispers that you can’t do both, operating as a quiet caution against leaps of faith and acts of altruism. University of Pennsylvania law professor and moral psychologist Tess Wilkinson-Ryan brings evidence from studies in psychology, sociology, and economics to show how the sucker construct shapes, and distorts, human decision-making. Fool Proof offers the first in-depth analysis of the sucker’s game as implicit worldview, drawing evidence everywhere from grocery shopping to international trade deals, from road rage to #MeToo. Offering real-world puzzles and stories, Wilkinson-Ryan explores what kinds of hustles feel like scams and which ones feel like business as usual, who gets pegged as suckers and who gets lauded as saints. She takes deep dives into areas like the psychology of stereotyping, the history of ethnic slurs, and the economics of the family—and shows how the threat of being suckered is deployed to perpetuate social and economic hierarchies. Ultimately, Fool Proof argues that the goal is not so much to spot the con as to renegotiate its meaning. The fear of being suckered can be weaponized to disrupt cooperation and trust, but it can also be defused and reframed to make space for moral agency and social progress. Facing the fear of being suckered head-on means deciding for ourselves what risks to take, what relationships to invest in, when to share, and when to protest—drafting a new template for how to live with integrity in a sucker’s world.

About Tess Wilkinson-Ryan

Tess Wilkinson-Ryan is a professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. She has a law degree and a doctorate in psychology, and studies the moral psychology of legal decision-making, teaching courses in contracts, consumer law, and leadership. Wilkinson-Ryan grew up in Maine and now lives in Philadelphia with her husband and two children.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Chris on April 24, 2023

This is one of my new favorite books, and I couldn’t put it down. As soon as I saw it, I knew I had to read it. Misinformation has been a major topic in recent years, so my thoughts are that people are far too gullible and fall for anything, but I knew that couldn’t be the whole story. When I saw th......more

Goodreads review by J. on March 05, 2023

I enjoyed the author’s weaving of personal anecdotes, academic research and well-known stories to support her ideas regarding suckerdom. The book made me think about times I’ve been a sucker and other times when maybe a should have been. If you enjoy Adam Grant and Malcolm Gladwell, this is one for......more

Goodreads review by Daniel on April 29, 2023

So we really don’t want to be suckers. Suckers have lower social standing than grifters, unless the grifters are punished. We would go out of our way to punish grifters, even at our disadvantage. However, this leads to a few strange phenomena: 1. We would tell ourselves stories to fool ourselves into......more

Goodreads review by Yuen on July 29, 2023

If you know the word “sugrophobia” then you probably don’t need to read this. I was intrigued by the intro - how to live with integrity in a sucker’s world. Interesting to know that we can overplay the prospect of playing the fool, feel that that’s existential and throw good rationale away due to th......more

Goodreads review by Lily’s Haiku Book Review on April 27, 2023

Moms’ a sucker’s job Rather a fool than heartless Profuse Trump examples......more