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WYSIATI stands for “What You See Is All There Is.” It was coined by psychologist Daniel Kahneman in his book Thinking, Fast and Slow to describe a fundamental limitation of human reasoning:
We tend to make decisions and form judgments based only on the information immediately available to us — and we largely ignore the possibility that there is relevant information we don’t see or don’t know.
WYSIATI is a mental shortcut that helps us make quick decisions, but it also explains why we:
Suppose you read a glowing review of a new restaurant. It sounds fantastic, and without checking other sources, you decide it must be great. But perhaps the review was written by a friend of the owner. WYSIATI means your mind doesn't demand more data — what you see feels like enough.
In decision-making:
Kahneman’s deeper insight is that System 1 (our fast, intuitive brain) is very good at building stories from little data. It doesn’t like uncertainty. WYSIATI is a side effect: we create meaning from what's in front of us and move on, often without realizing how thin the evidence really was.