Claude Shannon on Creative Thinking
In 1952, Claude Shannon, the father of information theory, gave a rare internal lecture at Bell Labs on how creative thinking works. It is widely regarded as one of the most practical talks ever given on how breakthroughs actually happen.
This visual guide breaks down Shannon's framework into diagrams, flowcharts, and structured sections, transforming it into something you can actually apply the next time you're stuck on a hard problem.
Warren Buffett on the Art of Spotting Extraordinary Investments
In October 1998, Warren Buffett delivered a freewheeling lecture to MBA students at the University of Florida, covering everything from the era’s economic environment to Valentine's Day candy sales. Beneath the anecdotes and folksy humor lay a comprehensive philosophy on investing, character, and business that has proven extraordinarily durable.
This visual guide distills the lecture into its core frameworks: economic moats, the circle of competence, pricing power, and the radical discipline of doing almost nothing.
Charlie Munger on the Psychology of Human Misjudgment
Charlie Munger never formally studied psychology, yet he built one of the most practical frameworks for understanding why people make terrible decisions.
This visual guide organizes Munger's 24 causes of misjudgment into clean categories, highlighted takeaways, and real-world examples you can absorb in minutes instead of hours.