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Decision fatigue may also lead to consumers making poor choices with their purchases. There is a paradox in that "people who lack choices seem to want them and often will fight for them", yet at the same time, "people find that making many choices can be [psychologically] aversive."
The Paradox of Choice – Why More Is Less is a book written by American psychologist Barry Schwartz and first published in 2004 by Harper Perennial.In the book, Schwartz argues that eliminating consumer choices can greatly reduce anxiety for shoppers.
Williams noted that this would contribute to the discussion on whether (as Lack argued) an organism's reproductive processes are tuned to serve its own reproductive interest (natural selection), or as V.C. Wynne-Edwards proposed, [3] to increase the chances of survival of the species to which the individual belonged (group selection).
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The lack of competition appeared to have dampened enthusiasm, with voter turnout in Leon County landing at a lackluster 23%. ... “I just wish there were better choices,” said Joe Wood, a ...
Lacan first designated a lack of being: what is desired is being itself."Desire is a relation to being to lack. The lack is the lack of being properly speaking. It is not the lack of this or that, but lack of being whereby the being exists" (Seminar: The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis).
Choice overload (sometimes called overchoice in the context of confusion) occurs when the set of purchasing options becomes overwhelmingly large for a consumer. A good example is wine in the UK where supermarkets may present over 1000 different products leaving the consumer with a difficult choice process.
(The Center Square) – Parent demand for K-12 school choice remains high in post-COVID America, but many states make the process too complicated, and bureaucracy is a barrier, a new survey says.