Most decisions that ruin lives don't feel dangerous.They feel calm.They feel informed.They feel reasonable.That's the problem.The Little Book of Judgment Under Uncertainty is not about making better decisions.It is about understanding why intelligent, careful people repeatedly lock themselves into irreversible mistakes-while believing they are being sensible.This book doesn't study outcomes.It studies what happens before outcomes become inevitable.Across markets, careers, organizations, and private life, the same failure repeats: Confidence arrives before clarityExplanation replaces controlDelay feels safe while options quietly disappearIntelligence increases commitment instead of reducing riskReasonable decisions become permanent constraintsThese failures don't come from recklessness.They come from comfort.This book shows how judgment behaves when: Information is incompleteSignals conflictTime applies pressure quietlyConsequences arrive lateInstead of offering advice, frameworks, or checklists, the book exposes structural patterns-the mechanics that cause judgment to fail long before damage is visible.You will learn: Why stability often hides fragilityHow delay quietly destroys optionalityWhy optimization makes systems brittleWhy avoiding ruin matters more than winning bigHow early decisions shape decades through path dependenceWhat kinds of decision structures survive being wrongThere are no formulas here.No motivation.No promises.That absence is intentional.Under uncertainty, certainty is the risk.Written in a restrained, systems-driven style influenced by decision theory, risk analysis, and complexity thinking, this book is for readers who don't want confidence-they want fewer irreversible mistakes.If you are looking for: A decision-making frameworkAction stepsTactical adviceReassuranceThis book will disappoint you.If you want to understand why reasonable decisions so often become permanent damage, and how to design judgment that survives uncertainty, this book will change how you hesitate, commit, and stop.It will not make decisions easier.It will make mistakes smaller.That is the only improvement judgment can reliably deliver under uncertainty.Regards, Nishant Chandravanshi