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In this episode, Carl explores the idea of “negative capability,” a term coined by John Keats to describe the ability to remain in uncertainty without rushing to easy answers. In a world that constantly pressures us to predict, forecast, and sound confident, Carl suggests that real wisdom may lie in something different: the capacity to sit with ambiguity long enough to make thoughtful decisions. Good decisions, he argues, don’t require certainty. They require clarity about what matters and the courage to take the next small step—even when the future is unknown.
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 explores the idea of “negative capability,” a term coined by John Keats to describe the ability to remain in uncertainty without rushing to easy answers. In a world that constantly pressures us to predict, forecast, and sound confident, Carl suggests that real wisdom may lie in something different: the capacity to sit with ambiguity long enough to make thoughtful decisions. Good decisions, he argues, don’t require certainty. They require clarity about what matters and the courage to take the next small step—even when the future is unknown.
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/

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