If something is irrational, that means it won't work. It's usually unrealistic.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
If you simply announce that things are irrational, then that alone doesn't get you very far. You have to replace rational agents with some concrete notion of what it means to be irrational.
Even the most analytical thinkers are predictably irrational; the really smart ones acknowledge and address their irrationalities.
I believe, in the stock market - that's one of my fields - that most people are irrational. And to be irrational, you can be irrational in so many different ways that, practically, the result is indeterminate.
Irrationality interests me more than anything: sometimes it's very dangerous, but it can be incredibly beautiful.
In everything one thing is impossible: rationality.
By the way, the point between rationality and what we would call the irrational is a very difficult point to establish. There's no specific line, as you know.
Since all life is futility, then the decision to exist must be the most irrational of all.
It is the mission of the twentieth century to elucidate the irrational.
It is even possible that laws which have not their origin in the mind may be irrational, and we can never succeed in formulating them.
The irrationality of a thing is no argument against its existence, rather a condition of it.