Filters▼
Sort
Sorting applies immediately after selection.
Categories
Tags
Top 20Showing 1–12 of 46
The book argues that the rapid adoption of smartphones and social media between 2010 and 2015 has fundamentally rewired adolescent development, leading to a global mental health crisis. This "Great Rewiring" shifted childhood from play-based to phone-based, exposing a vulnerable generation to addictive algorithms and constant social comparison. The text highlights four core harms: social deprivation, sleep deprivation, attention fragmentation, and addiction, affecting girls and boys differently. It proposes systemic reforms: delaying smartphone and social media use, creating phone-free schools, restoring unsupervised play, and promoting collective action by governments, tech companies, schools, and parents to foster a healthier, real-world-grounded childhood.
How to Know a Person: The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen
David Brooks • 2023
The author explores the profound human need to be truly seen and understood, moving from his own emotionally reserved upbringing to advocate for empathetic connection. He distinguishes between "Diminishers" and "Illuminators," highlighting psychological barriers to accurate perception. The book emphasizes practical social skills like attentive listening, asking open-ended questions, and patient accompaniment, crucial for building genuine relationships in an increasingly fragmented society. It delves into the nature of empathy, acknowledging suffering, and the transformative power of allowing others to share their unique life stories and cultural inheritances. Ultimately, it redefines wisdom as the ability to create hospitable spaces where individuals feel safe to reveal their authentic selves, fostering deeper human connection.
Bittersweet: How Sorrow and Longing Make Us Whole
Susan Cain • 2022
Susan Cain's "Bittersweet" explores the profound power of longing, sorrow, and impermanence, arguing that these often-avoided emotions are essential for a full and connected human experience. The book challenges the pervasive societal pressure for constant positivity, particularly in American culture, and instead advocates for embracing the bittersweet—a recognition that light and dark are inextricably linked. Through personal anecdotes, scientific research, and philosophical insights, Cain demonstrates how acknowledging sadness can foster deeper compassion, spark creativity, and lead to profound self-transcendence. Ultimately, "Bittersweet" suggests that by integrating pain and loss, individuals can find greater meaning, forge authentic connections, and navigate life's complexities with grace.
Dopamine Nation: Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence
Anna Lembke • 2021
This book explores the intricate relationship between pleasure and pain in a world saturated with rewarding stimuli. It argues that constant access to dopamine-releasing activities, from drugs to digital distractions, shifts our brain's pleasure-pain balance towards pain. This relentless pursuit of pleasure often leads to a dopamine deficit, making individuals less resilient and more prone to anxiety and addiction. The core message is that understanding this homeostatic balance is vital for a fulfilling life. Recovery strategies include abstinence to reset reward pathways, self-binding, and radical honesty to foster genuine connections. Embracing moderate, self-imposed pain can also restore equilibrium and enhance joy.
The Comfort Crisis: Embrace Discomfort To Reclaim Your Wild, Happy, Healthy Self
Michael Easter • 2021
The author embarks on a thirty-three-day Arctic expedition, seeking to escape the detrimental comforts of modern life and reconnect with ancestral discomforts. He explores how pervasive convenience has eroded human physical and mental health, leading to new ailments and a detachment from meaningful experiences. Drawing on personal struggles with addiction, evolutionary history, and psychological research, the narrative argues that embracing challenges, silence, hunger, and extreme environments can rewire the brain, foster resilience, and enhance well-being. Through a caribou hunt and intense physical exertion, he rediscovers primal capacities, advocating for deliberate hardship as a path to a more present and robust existence.
The Scout Mindset: Why Some People See Things Clearly and Others Don't
Julia Galef • 2021
Julia Galef's "The Scout Mindset" advocates for valuing truth and objective reality over self-deception and motivated reasoning. She contrasts the "scout mindset," which seeks to understand the world as it is, with the "soldier mindset," which defends existing beliefs. The book argues that intelligence alone doesn't guarantee clear judgment; a willingness to confront uncomfortable truths is crucial. Galef offers practical tools like thought experiments and probability thinking to cultivate self-awareness and overcome biases. She demonstrates that embracing reality, even when challenging, is compatible with happiness and success, promoting resilience, effective motivation, and authentic influence by holding one's identity lightly and continuously updating beliefs.
Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment
Sunstein, Cass R. & Sibony, Olivier & Kahneman, Daniel • 2021
The book explores "noise"—unwanted variability in human judgment—as a pervasive and neglected source of error, distinct from bias. Using analogies and noise audits in various fields like justice, medicine, and business, it reveals that noise is often "scandalously high" and far more impactful than commonly perceived, accumulating rather than cancelling out. The text details how noise arises from psychological heuristics, individual cognitive styles, group dynamics, and the inherent limits of human matching operations. It advocates for "decision hygiene" strategies like structured assessments, independent judgments, and algorithmic tools to reduce noise, arguing that while zero noise may be impractical, recognizing and actively combating it is crucial for improving fairness, accuracy, and efficiency in professional decisions.
This book summarizes Viktor Frankl's 1946 lectures, delivered shortly after his liberation from a Nazi labor camp and profound personal loss. Daniel Goleman introduces Frankl's logotherapy, a psychiatric approach centered on finding meaning through purposeful action, love, and one's attitude toward unavoidable suffering. Frankl challenges passive optimism, advocating for individual responsibility and the belief that life constantly asks something of us. Even in the extreme conditions of concentration camps, he illustrates that individuals retain the freedom to choose their psychological response. The lectures emphasize that a profound sense of purpose is vital for resilience and survival, enabling one to face any hardship with dignity and embrace life's inherent value.
12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos
Jordan B. Peterson • 2018
This book presents a set of practical rules for navigating life's inherent challenges and finding meaning amidst suffering. Drawing on psychology, philosophy, and mythology, the author explores the balance between order and chaos, individual responsibility, and the importance of truth. Topics range from establishing dominance hierarchies (like lobsters) to proper parenting and the pursuit of meaning over expedience. The work emphasizes personal accountability, courageous confrontation of reality, and the necessity of confronting one's own flaws before criticizing the world. Ultimately, it guides readers toward developing competence, standing up for themselves, and finding redemptive moments in the face of tragedy.
The book, "The Laws of Human Nature," asserts that individuals are largely governed by deep, unconscious impulses rather than pure reason, influencing actions, relationships, and societal structures. It provides a framework for understanding these fundamental laws—such as irrationality, narcissism, and conformity—to foster greater self-awareness, neutralize manipulators, and cultivate a "higher self." The text advocates for decoding nonverbal cues, discerning true character beyond appearances, managing personal emotional biases, and developing purpose and empathy. By confronting our shadow selves, embracing mortality, and adapting to societal shifts, readers can achieve authenticity, strategic power, and liberation from self-sabotage, leading to a more impactful and realistic existence.
Thinking in bets : making smarter decisions when you don’t have all the facts
Annie Duke • 2018
The author, a former cognitive psychology student turned professional poker player, argues that life is more akin to poker than chess due to incomplete information and uncertainty. Her book introduces "thinking in bets" as a framework to improve decision-making by objectively separating the quality of a decision from its outcome. It highlights pervasive cognitive biases like "resulting," motivated reasoning, and self-serving bias that hinder rational learning. The text advocates for expressing beliefs probabilistically, actively vetting evidence, and cultivating truthseeking habits. It also promotes forming diverse accountability groups and using mental time travel techniques, such as premortems and Ulysses contracts, to mitigate impulsive choices and foster long-term rational thinking in an uncertain world.
The book explores the paradox of human ingenuity contrasted with profound individual ignorance, positing that people consistently overestimate their understanding of the world. It introduces the "illusion of explanatory depth," where individuals believe they know more than they do, even about common objects. The authors argue that true intelligence resides in a collective "community of knowledge," leveraging the brain, body, external environment, and other people. While this communal reliance facilitates complex societal achievements, it also breeds overconfidence, contributing to issues like political polarization and an uncritical approach to technology. The text advocates for recognizing individual ignorance and fostering collaborative intelligence for smarter decision-making in a complex world.