
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Carl reflects on a line often attributed to H. L. Mencken: "Every complex problem has a solution that is simple, direct, plausible—and wrong." Carl explores the tension between simplicity and complexity, and the discipline required to stay in the messy middle long enough to find what he calls “elegant simplicity.” Instead of rushing to easy answers, the real work involves living with ambiguity, cutting through layers of nuance, and gradually discovering the clarity that lies on the far side of complexity.
Want more from Carl? Get the shortest, most impactful weekly email on the web! Sign up for the Weekly Letter from Certified Financial Planner™ and New York Times columnist Carl Richards here: https://behaviorgap.com/
By Carl Richards4.9
124124 ratings
In this episode, Carl reflects on a line often attributed to H. L. Mencken: "Every complex problem has a solution that is simple, direct, plausible—and wrong." Carl explores the tension between simplicity and complexity, and the discipline required to stay in the messy middle long enough to find what he calls “elegant simplicity.” Instead of rushing to easy answers, the real work involves living with ambiguity, cutting through layers of nuance, and gradually discovering the clarity that lies on the far side of complexity.
Want more from Carl? Get the shortest, most impactful weekly email on the web! Sign up for the Weekly Letter from Certified Financial Planner™ and New York Times columnist Carl Richards here: https://behaviorgap.com/

2,000 Listeners

2,175 Listeners

1,312 Listeners

5,156 Listeners

694 Listeners

2,020 Listeners

616 Listeners

2,145 Listeners

934 Listeners

246 Listeners

114 Listeners

339 Listeners

184 Listeners

133 Listeners

139 Listeners