You know, “The trick is to be reasonable, not rational” is one of those lines that sticks with you. It’s a subtle but powerful distinction that changes how you approach money, business, and even life. Let’s break down why this is so brilliant.
Share Image Quote:At its core, this quote is about understanding that people are emotional creatures, not coldly logical spreadsheets. Being rational is about pure, unfeeling math. Being reasonable is about what works in the messy, unpredictable real world with real people.
Okay, so here’s the thing I’ve seen play out again and again. A “rational” decision looks perfect on paper. The numbers add up, the logic is flawless. But it ignores the human element—fear, greed, ego, the need for safety, the desire for peace of mind.
Being “reasonable,” on the other hand, is about accepting that reality. It’s the acknowledgment that the theoretically optimal choice might be emotionally unbearable, or that a small financial inefficiency is a worthwhile price to pay for a good night’s sleep. It’s about sustainability over theoretical perfection. It’s the difference between a plan that *should* work and a plan that a human being can actually stick with.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Original Language | English (4111) |
| Category | Wisdom (465) |
| Topics | decision making (18), reason (8) |
| Literary Style | succinct (152) |
| Overall Quote Score | 64 (50) |
This wisdom comes straight from Morgan Housel’s fantastic 2020 book, *The Psychology of Money*. It’s a modern classic for a reason. You sometimes see this idea floating around without attribution, but it’s Housel’s original phrasing and a central theme of his work on behavioral finance.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Author | Morgan Housel (49) |
| Source Type | Book (4638) |
| Source/Book Name | The Psychology of Money (49) |
| Origin Timeperiod | 21st Century (1995) |
| Original Language | English (4111) |
| Authenticity | Verified (4638) |
| Quotation | The trick is to be reasonable, not rational |
| Book Details | Publication Year: 2020; ISBN-10: 0857197681; ISBN-13: 978-0857197689; Pages: 256 (approx.) |
| Where is it? | Approximate chapter: Reasonable > Rational |
In the book, Housel uses this concept to explain why the most successful financial strategies aren’t always the most mathematically complex. He argues that the best plan is the one you won’t abandon during a market crash, even if a robot would tell you to hold. It’s about tailoring your strategy to your own psychology, not to a textbook.
Let me give you a couple of scenarios where this hits home.
This quote is for anyone making decisions where human emotion is a factor—so, you know, everyone.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Theme | Principle (997) |
| Audiences | investors (195), leaders (2962), strategists (18) |
| Usage Context/Scenario | decision-making workshop (1), ethics discussion (1), leadership course (1) |
Question: So is being rational bad?
Answer: Not at all. Rationality is a fantastic tool. The point is not to be *irrational*, but to recognize that pure rationality has limits when applied to human behavior. Use rationality as a guide, but let reasonableness be the final judge.
Question: Can you give a simple analogy?
Answer: Sure. A rational diet is 100% optimized for macros and nutrients. A *reasonable* diet includes the occasional piece of birthday cake because it makes life worth living and the diet sustainable in the long run.
Question: How does this apply to arguing with people?
Answer: Aha, great question. You can be rationally right in an argument, with all the facts on your side, and still lose because you were unreasonable in your delivery and ignored the other person’s feelings. Winning the battle but losing the war, as they say.
The only way to get the best of an argument… is to not have it. It’s a counter-intuitive piece of genius that flips our entire approach to conflict on its…
You know, I’ve always found that “Doing the unrealistic is easier than doing the realistic.” It sounds like a contradiction, but it’s a game-changer for productivity and innovation. Once you…
There is only one way to get the best of an argument… and honestly, it’s the most counterintuitive business hack I’ve ever learned. It feels like you’re giving up, but…
You know, when Eckhart Tolle said “All problems are illusions of the mind,” he wasn’t dismissing your pain. He was pointing to a radical shift in perception. It’s about realizing…
Insanity is the inability to communicate your ideas… and honestly, that definition changes everything. It reframes “crazy” not as some clinical diagnosis, but as a fundamental human struggle we all…
You know, when Paulo Coelho said "There is no greater evil than to deny one’s…
The fear of death makes us hold on... but it's a double-edged sword. It keeps…
You know, when Paulo Coelho said "Good people do not need laws to tell them,"…
You know, the devil's greatest triumph was convincing the world... it's such a powerful line…
You know, I've been thinking a lot about that idea, "The greatest sin is not…
Every moment in life is an act of faith because we're all navigating a world…
This website uses cookies.
Read More