Philip Kahn, author of "Good Personal Decisions: How We Make Them and Who Gets to Decide"
Hello—I’m Philip Kahn

AI research scientist, entrepreneur, and author explores how decisions get made

Philip Kahn spent decades studying decision-making in complex real-world systems. In his book Good Personal Decisions, he explores how our choices are shaped by the environments that make them possible—and who gets to decide.

As an AI research scientist working in computer vision and planning, Kahn founded and led a robotics company—inventing products, managing teams, and shaping decision environments. As a result, his work reflects a lifelong pursuit of useful, creative decision-making in the real world, which he now shares in his upcoming book Good Personal Decisions.

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How I think about the BOOK

Decisions aren’t just choices—they’re environments

We often treat decision-making as a personal skill: gather information, weigh options, choose wisely. However, in practice, the options we see—and the costs of choosing them—are shaped by the systems around us.

In both research and entrepreneurship, I’ve watched small design decisions cascade into major outcomes: what gets measured, what gets rewarded, what gets hidden, and what becomes “normal.” As a result, those patterns show up everywhere—from product design to public policy to everyday life.

“Our environments define our decisions, what we can do, and who we can become.”

from Good Personal Decisions by Philip Kahn

What shaped this book

A career spent building and studying intelligent systems led to a simple question: who gets to decide what choices are available—and what happens when those environments change?

Decision-making in complex environments
Origins

From robotics to real-world decision environments

My work has focused on how people and machines act under constraints—time, information, incentives, and organizational structure. Those constraints don’t just influence decisions; they create the decision space.

Complex systems and human behavior

Incentives, feedback loops, and unintended outcomes

Designing environments that support better choices

The Decision Age

Why “good decisions” are harder than they look

Today, platforms, policies, and algorithms increasingly shape what we see, what we can do, and what we’re nudged to choose. Understanding that architecture is essential to making decisions that remain genuinely ours.

Attention and information overload

Defaults, friction, and choice design

Agency, accountability, and governance

Making good personal decisions
Good decision environments are an alliance between decision-makers
What to expect

A practical lens for readers and leaders

The book blends research, stories, and frameworks you can use—whether you’re making personal choices, leading teams, or designing systems that affect others.

Clear mental models and examples

Questions to pressure-test your choices

Tools for shaping healthier decision environments