The Akrasia Effect - Deepstash
The Akrasia Effect

The Akrasia Effect

Akrasia is the ancient Greek term for acting against your better judgment—the gap between what you plan to do and what you actually do. This phenomenon occurs because:

  • Your present self values immediate rewards over future benefits
  • Your future self appears as almost a different person psychologically
  • Environmental cues trigger automatic behaviors regardless of intentions
  • Willpower is a limited resource that depletes throughout the day

The solution involves creating commitment devices that lock in decisions ahead of time, designing your environment to make good choices easier than bad ones, and using implementation intentions (When X happens, I'll do Y) to bridge the gap between planning and action.

1

11 reads

CURATED FROM

IDEAS CURATED BY

phillipmcclain

The Greeks were right.

Tired of feeling busy but not productive? This refreshing guide cuts through the productivity noise with evidence-backed strategies tested in real life. Chris Bailey spent a year as his own guinea pig—meditating for 35 hours, working 90-hour weeks, living in isolation—to discover what actually works. Spoiler: it's not about doing more things, but about doing the right things with deliberate attention. Perfect for overwhelmed people who want to accomplish what matters.

Similar ideas to The Akrasia Effect

Getting Back on Track with the Fresh Start Effect

  1. Be strategic about when you want to start changing your behavior. If you want to trigger the fresh start effect you must think carefully about the meaning behind the days for yourself.
  2. When you start to drift away...

Read & Learn

20x Faster

without
deepstash

with
deepstash

with

deepstash

Personalized microlearning

100+ Learning Journeys

Access to 200,000+ ideas

Access to the mobile app

Unlimited idea saving

Unlimited history

Unlimited listening to ideas

Downloading & offline access

Supercharge your mind with one idea per day

Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.

Email

I agree to receive email updates