Warren Buffett on the Art of Spotting Extraordinary Investments

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.

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Charlie Munger on the Psychology of Human Misjudgment

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.

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Naval Ravikant on Wealth, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life

Naval Ravikant on Wealth, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life

Naval Ravikant sat down with Joe Rogan in June 2019 and spent over two hours dismantling conventional wisdom about wealth, work, and happiness. His formula is deceptively simple — specific knowledge, multiplied by accountability, multiplied by leverage — but the implications run deep.

This visual breakdown maps every major idea from the conversation, including the three types of leverage (and why code and media are the only ones worth chasing), the lion work model, the happiness framework, and the one unlock that ties it all together: permissionless.

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