个人管理
Historical Dynamics 豆瓣
作者: Peter Turchin 出版社: Princeton University Press 2003 - 9
Many historical processes are dynamic. Populations grow and decline. Empires expand and collapse. Religions spread and wither. Natural scientists have made great strides in understanding dynamical processes in the physical and biological worlds using a synthetic approach that combines mathematical modeling with statistical analyses. Taking up the problem of territorial dynamics - why some polities at certain times expand and at other times contract - this book shows that a similar research program can advance our understanding of dynamical processes in history. Peter Turchin develops hypotheses from a wide range of social, political, economic, and demographic factors: geopolitics, factors affecting collective solidarity, dynamics of ethnic assimilation/religious conversion, and the interaction between population dynamics and sociopolitical stability. He then translates these into a spectrum of mathematical models, investigates the dynamics predicted by the models, and contrasts model predictions with empirical patterns. Turchin's highly instructive empirical tests demonstrate that certain models predict empirical patterns with a very high degree of accuracy. For instance, one model accounts for the recurrent waves of state breakdown in medieval and early modern Europe. And historical data confirm that ethno-nationalist solidarity produces an aggressively expansive state under certain conditions (such as in locations where imperial frontiers coincide with religious divides). The strength of Turchin's results suggests that the synthetic approach he advocates can significantly improve our understanding of historical dynamics.
寿命是一点一滴努力来的 豆瓣
作者: 一心不二堂 编 出版社: 世界知识出版社 2015 - 8
《寿命是一点一滴努力来的》原作者陈女士,1939年生于台中。作者出生即患中度地中海贫血症,得这种病能活过成年的,据说几乎近于零,虽然好多次濒危,却出人意料地一再苏醒而活了下来,且取得了漂亮的学业和事业成就,并冒缺血缺氧的妊娠危险,遵照古训,生养了五名儿女,个个优秀。现在,作者一家人在宁静、安详、和平中,过着亲朋戚友所羡慕的圆满幸福生活。
这本小册子,初版于2001年,就是作者六十二年来在疾病的折磨下,如何坚强求生的一些血泪交织的经验。这些发自肺腑的文字感动了无数人,更改变了无数人的心田和生命旨归,改变了无数人的命运。国学大师南怀瑾先生曾大力倡印此书,并当做教材;民间亦有大量流通。所有这一切,为了普利世间,作者完全放弃稿费,唯愿“永为众生之慈母”,愿您也长命百岁,拥有一颗慈悲的、漂亮的心和同样漂亮的人生……
战拖行动 豆瓣
The Procrastination Equation:How to Stop Putting Things Off and Start Getting Stuff Done
7.6 (5 个评分) 作者: [加] 皮尔斯·斯蒂尔(Piers Steel) 译者: 陶婧 周玥 曹媛媛 等 出版社: 北京联合出版社 2019 - 4
● 你是一个拖延症患者吗?如果是,你是什么程度、什么类型的拖延者?《战拖行动》是全球知名且具影响力的拖延心理学研究者皮尔斯·斯蒂尔的著作。在书中,斯蒂尔博士剖析了3大拖延类型、4大战拖方法以及拖延公式的用法,让你可以重拾轻快的行动力。
● 斯蒂尔博士从801项有关拖延的研究中,总结出了影响拖延的三个因素——期望、价值感和时间,并提出了著名的拖延公式:
行动动机=(期望×价值感)÷(冲动×可推迟时间)
针对影响拖延的因素,斯蒂尔博士剖析了适合不同类型的拖延者的战拖方法,解读了减肥、工作和存钱这3个拖延非常普遍的领域的通关指南,让你对症下药,告别拖延。
● 《战拖行动》是一本全面、好用的战拖手册,只要透彻理解拖延公式的含义,根据作者的方法行动起来,你就能战胜拖延!
[编辑推荐]
● 解读3大拖延类型、提供4大战拖方法,无数海内外读者亲测有效!
● 作者从801项研究中总结出影响拖延的因素和拖延公式,让你可以对症下药克服拖延。
●本书提供详细的测试量表,让你轻松、简单地对自己的拖延程度和类型等进行测评。
●媲美《拖延心理学》的行为改变科学,已成为全球众多知名高校和知名企业的培训用书!
●从拖延症重度患者到动机、拖延领域的专家,作者以自己的亲身经历证明本书的有效性!
●著名心理学家、情商研究专家张怡筠,果壳网CEO姬十三,安人公司创始人阳志平,“战拖会”创始人、会长高地清风,“全球50位极具影响力的思想家”之丹尼尔·平克等人联袂推荐。
● 湛庐文化出品。
The Highly Sensitive Person 豆瓣 Goodreads
7.8 (6 个评分) 作者: Elaine Aron 出版社: Broadway 1997 - 6
Are you a highly sensitive person?
Do you have a keen imagination and vivid dreams?  Is time alone each day as essential to you as food and water?  Are you "too shy" or "too sensitive" according to others?  Do noise and confusion quickly overwhelm you?  If your answers are yes, you may be a Highly Sensitive Person (HSP).
Most of us feel overstimulated every once in a while, but for the Highly Sensitive Person, it's a way of life.  In this groundbreaking book, Dr. Elaine Aron, a psychotherapist, workshop leader and highly sensitive person herself, shows you how to identify this trait in yourself and make the most of it in everyday situations.  Drawing on her many years of research and hundreds of interviews, she shows how you can better understand yourself and your trait to create a fuller, richer life.
In The Highly Sensitive Person , you will discover:
* Self-assessment tests to help you identify your particular sensitivities
* Ways to reframe your past experiences in a positive light and gain greater self-esteem in the process
* Insight into how high sensitivity affects both work and personal relationships
* Tips on how to deal with overarousal
* Informations on medications and when to seek help
* Techniques to enrich the soul and spirit
My Stroke of Insight 豆瓣
作者: Jill Bolte Taylor 出版社: Viking Adult 2008 - 5
在线阅读本书
A brain scientist's journey from a debilitating stroke to full recovery becomes an inspiring exploration of human consciousness and its possibilities
On the morning of December 10, 1996, Jill Bolte Taylor, a thirty-seven-year-old Harvard-trained brain scientist, experienced a massive stroke when a blood vessel exploded in the left side of her brain. A neuroanatomist by profession, she observed her own mind completely deteriorate to the point that she could not walk, talk, read, write, or recall any of her life, all within the space of four brief hours. As the damaged left side of her brain--the rational, grounded, detail- and time-oriented side--swung in and out of function, Taylor alternated between two distinct and opposite realties: the euphoric nirvana of the intuitive and kinesthetic right brain, in which she felt a sense of complete well-being and peace; and the logical, sequential left brain, which recognized Jill was having a stroke, and enabled her to seek help before she was lost completely.
In My Stroke of Insight , Taylor shares her unique perspective on the brain and its capacity for recovery, and the sense of omniscient understanding she gained from this unusual and inspiring voyage out of the abyss of a wounded brain. It would take eight years for Taylor to heal completely. Because of her knowledge of how the brain works, her respect for the cells composing her human form, and most of all an amazing mother, Taylor completely repaired her mind and recalibrated her understanding of the world according to the insights gained from her right brain that morning of December 10th.
Today Taylor is convinced that the stroke was the best thing that could have happened to her. It has taught her that the feeling of nirvana is never more than a mere thought away. By stepping to the right of our left brains , we can all uncover the feelings of well-being and peace that are so often sidelined by our own brain chatter. A fascinating journey into the mechanics of the human mind, My Stroke of Insight is both a valuable recovery guide for anyone touched by a brain injury, and an emotionally stirring testimony that deep internal peace truly is accessible to anyone, at any time. Questions for Jill Bolte Taylor Amazon.com: Your first reaction when you realized what was happening to your body was one you would expect: "Oh my gosh, I'm having a stroke!" Your second, though, was a little more surprising: "Wow, this is so cool!" What could be cool about a stroke? Taylor: I grew up to study the brain because I have a brother who is only 18 months older than I am. He was very different in the way he perceived experiences and then chose to behave. As a result, I became fascinated with the human brain and how it creates our perception of reality. He was eventually diagnosed with the brain disorder schizophrenia, and I dedicated my career to the postmortem investigation of the human brain in an attempt to understand, at a biological level, what are the differences between my brain and my brothers brain. On the morning of the stroke, I realized that my brain was no longer functioning like a "normal" brain and this insight into my brother's reality excited me. I was fascinated to intimately understand what it might be like on the inside for someone who would not be diagnosed as normal. Through the eyes of a curious scientist, this was an absolutely rare and fascinating experience for me to witness the breakdown of my own mind. Amazon.com: What did you learn about the brain from your stroke and your recovery that your scientific training hadn't prepared you for? Taylor: My scientific training did not teach me anything about the human spirit and the value of compassion. I had been trained as a scientist, not as a clinician. I can only hope that we are teaching our future physicians about compassion in medicine, and I know that some medical schools, including the Indiana University School of Medicine, have created a curriculum with this intention. My training as a scientist, however, did provide me with a roadmap to how the body and brain work. And although I lost my left cognitive mind that thinks in language, I retained my right hemisphere that thinks in pictures. As a result, although I could not communicate with the external world, I had an intuitive understanding about what I needed to do in order to create an environment in which the cells in my brain could be happy and healthy enough that they could regain their function. In addition, because of my training, I had an innate trust in the ability of my brain to be able to recover itself and my mother and I respected the organ by listening to it. For example, when I was tired, I allowed my brain to sleep, and when I was fresh and capable of focusing my attention, we gave me age-appropriate toys and tools with which to work. Amazon.com: Your stroke affected functions in your left brain, leaving you to what you call the "la-la land" of your right hemisphere. What was it like to live in your right brain, and then to rebuild your left? Taylor: When the cells in my left brain became nonfunctional because they were swimming in a pool of blood, they lost their ability to inhibit the cells in my right hemisphere. In my right brain, I shifted into the consciousness of the present moment. I was in the right here, right now awareness, with no memories of my past and no perception of the future. The beauty of La-la land (my right hemisphere experience of the present moment) was that everything was an explosion of magnificent stimulation and I dwelled in a space of euphoria. This is great way to exist if you don't have to communicate with the external world or care whether or not you have the capacity to learn. I found that in order for me to be able to learn anything, however, I had to take information from the last moment and apply it to the present moment. When my left hemisphere was completely nonfunctional early on, it was impossible for me to learn, which was okay with me, but I am sure it was frustrating for those around me. A simple example of this was trying to put on my shoes and socks. I eventually became physically capable of putting my shoes and socks on, but I had no ability to understand why I would have to put my socks on before my shoes. To me they were simply independent actions that were not related and I did not have the cognitive ability to figure out the appropriate sequencing of the events. Over time, I regained the ability to weave moments back together to create an expanse of time, and with this ability came the ability to learn methodically again. Life in La-la land will always be just a thought away, but I am truly grateful for the ability to think with linearity once again. Amazon.com: What can we learn about our brains and ourselves from your experience, even if we haven't lived through the kind of brain trauma you have? Taylor: I learned that I have much more say about what goes on between my ears than I was ever taught and I believe that this is true for all of us. I used to understand that I had the ability to stop thinking about one thing by consciously choosing to preoccupy my mind with thinking about something else. But I had no idea that it only took 90 seconds for me to have an emotional circuit triggered, flush a physiological response through my body and then flush completely out of me. We can all learn that we can take full responsibility for what thoughts we are thinking and what emotional circuitry we are feeling. Knowing this and acting on this can lead us into feeling a wonderful sense of well-being and peacefulness. Amazon.com: You are the "Singin' Scientist" for Harvard's Brain Bank (just as you were before your stroke). Could you tell us about the Brain Bank (in song or not)? Taylor: There is a long-term shortage of brain tissue donated for research into the severe mental illnesses. Most people dont realize that when you sign the back of your license as an organ donor, the brain is not included. If you would like to donate your brain for research, you must contact a brain bank directly. There is also a shortage of "normal control" tissue for research. The bottom line reality is that if there were more tissue available for research, then more scientists would be dedicating their careers to the study of the severe mental illnesses and we would have more answers about what is going on with these disorders. The numbers of mentally ill individuals in our society are staggering. The most serious and disabling conditions affect about 6 percent--or one in 17--adults and 9-13 percent of children in the United States. Half of all lifetime conditions of mental illness start by age 14 years, and three-fourths by age 24 years. For more information about brain donation to the Harvard brain bank, please call 1-800-BRAINBANK or visit them at: www.brainbank.mclean.org If you would like to hear me sing the brain bank jingle, please visit www.drjilltaylor.com!
我每天只工作3小时 豆瓣
仕事に必要なことはすべて映画で学べる 会社に使い倒されないための9の心得
6.5 (40 个评分) 作者: [日]押井守(Mamoru Oshii) 译者: 谢承翰 / 高詹灿 出版社: 四川人民出版社 2018 - 10
日本动画大师、《攻壳机动队》导演押井守
教你从电影中体会职场法则、工作之道
热血派?摸鱼党?找对角色,决胜职场!
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※编辑推荐※
日复一日的劳作消磨了干劲,复杂的人际关系让人心累,积压的待办事项加班加点也赶不完……“丧班一族”大概都曾自问过:难道就要这样周一盼周末、时间换工钱,不开心地混下去了吗?
执导过《攻壳机动队》的押井守导演虽被外界称作“小众的帝王”,然而他却有极为朴素务实的工作、组织观念,这次,他以自身的胜败观为基础,精选九部经典电影,对应公司中的各级职位,设身处地思考角色的出路,开出了一剂“向社畜说不”的工作哲学处方——
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本品成分:
思路清奇解经典 / 金句频出毒“鸭”汤 / 动画同行大起底 / 国民心态麻辣评……扎心又治愈,冰火两重天!
对症患者:
不得人心的上司 / 日常暴走的中层 / 烂泥扶不上墙的下属 / 浑噩度日的丧气上班族 / 从睁眼干到闭眼的被动工作狂 / 一切都错在别人的惯性甩锅侠……
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◎ 大师哲学:带你看片、教你做人,提高影商打开思路
◎ 取胜心态:认清角色、摆正目标,既然出手绝不服输
◎ 执导生涯:玩转片场、拒绝过劳,完成任务守护下属
◎ 业界起底:借题发挥、指桑骂槐,吐槽同行花样百出
◎ 辣评国民:畏惧风险、怕扛责任,激活低迷挣脱束缚
◎ 精彩对谈:科技世界、领导决策,自我实现社会立足
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一本影评集 | 挖掘冷门,重识大片
《凤凰劫》| 别人没问,就不要随意回答!——失败得再漂亮也没有意义
《点球成金》| 别相信那种说话全凭经验与直觉的人——布拉德·皮特的优先级
《晴空血战史》| 看你是要干掉下属,还是自我毁灭?——中层主管的残酷故事
《机动警察剧场版2》| 让无能下属工作的究极手段——不要给他选项
《锅匠,裁缝,士兵,间谍》| “想做的事”就是“不会腻的事”——当老二最舒服
《拯救大兵瑞恩》| 怠工才是上班族的终极兵器——史蒂文·斯皮尔伯格的诈术
《死者田园祭》| 越是优秀的成人,越会捏造自己的过去——打起精神去天马行空
《007:大破天幕杀机》| “一生追随老板的步伐”就是迈向用过就被丢弃的第一步——想要获得“老妈”的爱
《最长的一码》| 囚犯问:“获胜队伍”的绝对条件是什么?——得到灵魂的自由吧!
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一卷职场经 | 对抗外压,贯彻信念
中层主管要有怎样的觉悟?承上启下的二把手角色,如何做到谁也替代不了?
职场里没有设定人生目标,被压榨、做炮灰就是必然结果?
摸鱼也要讲究基本法,有些怠工竟然“你好我好大家好”?
工作中社恐是行不通的!作为上班一族,顶级重要的技能其实是沟通?
“老板走我也走”,你怎么知道走的是康庄大道还是穷途末路?
假若一名公务员想要在庞大体制中实现正义,那情况会是什么样的呢?
丧到触底也该反弹,具备了哪些条件,人才会燃起“一决胜负”的斗志?
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押井守金句毒“鸭”汤
「电影导演不是独裁者,而是“中层管理人员”。拍摄一部电影就像是发动一场战争,在电影导演的胜败观当中,最重要的就是“不可以输”。」
「没有比失败更令人感到舒适的事了。……只要失败一次,周边便会被不断的挫折环绕着,一辈子都沉浸在自我怜悯的情绪中。败北的蜜汁便是如此甜美。」
「当自己执导的电影评价不好时,可绝对不能说“这部电影失败了”。我是在宫崎骏先生身上学到这件事的。他跟我说:“你不可以自己说出 ‘失败了’,这话就算嘴巴裂了也不能说!” 」
「说什么输得漂亮,根本就是烂透了。既然要一决胜负了,当然要以胜利作为目标。」
「年轻人总想要从这种组织构成的人际关系中逃脱,以获得自由……那不过是在逃避责任罢了。我们不可以把“自由”当成逃走时的借口啊!」
「那种凭借努力与友情便能取得胜利的世界,在现实中并不存在。……烦恼是人类的必需品。身为人类,不会烦恼才比较奇怪。我们不能和整天无忧无虑的人搭档,那样绝对无法成功。」
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※内容简介※
在职场上,凭经验和直觉说话的人要信几分?为什么有人心甘情愿当“老二”?打工族的终极兵器居然是“怠工”?“一生追随老板的步伐”会有怎样的下场?中层主管如何在上级乱七八糟的命令之下守护自己与下属的性命?肩扛责任和感受自由是否可以兼得?
面对这些灵魂拷问,执导过《攻壳机动队》等动画神作的日本知名导演押井守的回答是:“包含着各色人等、多样工种的电影正是最佳的职场教科书!”
本书即由《日经商业在线》的连载专栏《押井守导演为了获胜而看的电影》整理修订而成,是一部影评集和工作生存指南。押井守导演心怀“上班是为了自我实现”的胜败观,以刁钻清奇的角度和扎心狠辣的文笔,拆解评析了九部反映组织管理中各式情形的电影。他从自己资深的影视从业经验出发,加上对日本社会文化的观察,推而广之总结出一套深具启迪性的处世哲学。
想要做工作的主人、化苦闷为快乐,最重要的是认清自己的角色,并掌握相应的“胜利条件”。你,准备好了吗?
德鲁克管理思想精要 豆瓣
The Essential Drucker
作者: 彼得·德鲁克 译者: 李维安 出版社: 机械工业出版社 2007 - 6
《德鲁克管理思想精要》的主要内容是:管理最初只建立在为数不多的几条基本原则之上:管理是关于人类的管理,其任务就是使人与人之间能够协调配合,扬长避短,实现最大的集体效益。管理者所做的工作内容都是完全一样的,但他们的工作方式却是千差万别。每个企业都要有责任坚定不移地树立一个共同的目标和统一的价值观。管理必须随需要与机会的变化而变化,以此促使企业及其成员能够得到更好的发展。每个企业内部都拥有具备不同技术与知识、从事不同工作的员工。无论是产品的数量还是净收益或净损失本身,都不足以衡量管理与企业的工作业绩。对所有企业来讲,结果只存在于企业外部,在企业内部,只有成本。一个管理者只有能够理解这些原则,才能成为一个不断获取成功、成绩斐然的管理者。
诊疗椅上的谎言 豆瓣
8.3 (13 个评分) 作者: [美] 欧文·亚隆Irvin D·Yalom 译者: 鲁宓 出版社: 机械工业出版社 2017 - 3
心理专家一向被认为是最善于观察人性的,谁能想到,他们也会容易上当受骗?当来访者满怀谎言走向诊疗椅,结局将大大出乎每个人的意料。诊疗过程中的对话亦真亦假,在移情与反移情、欺骗与背叛之间,暴露的却是真实的人性。
心理咨询师也是人,也会有普通人的情感与人格弱点,当他们陷入困境中时,该如何医治自己,又该如何负责任地引领来访者?
欧文·亚隆在书中以精心设计、巧妙连贯的编剧手法,探讨心理治疗过程中的移情与反移情、幼年经验、心理治疗的原则、如何促成来访者最重要的改变、如何督导心理治疗师的训练等,堪称最实用的心理咨询临床实战书,情节构思精巧严密,机关连环,跌宕起伏,极富戏剧性。
《诊疗椅上的谎言》具有亚隆所有小说的共同点:强悍的专业背景,充满妙喻和幽默的文笔,以及意想不到的结局,而论辛辣讽刺,《诊疗椅上的谎言》在亚隆所有的小说中堪称为最。
精力管理 豆瓣
7.1 (9 个评分) 作者: [美] 洛尔 译者: 付涛 出版社: 中信出版社 2003
生活在数字化的时代,时间管理已不再是可行的解决方案。我们匆匆忙
忙,风风火火;面对沉重的工作负荷,我们努力把每一天都安排得满满当当
;我们上紧了发条,但是我们却彻底地垮了。一天中有多少个小时是固定的
,但是我们所能调动的精力却不是这样的。吉姆·洛尔和托尼·施瓦茨编著
的《精力管理》证明:尽管我们不能挤出额外的时间,也不能减轻自己的压
力,但我们可以调动更有意义的东西——精力!管理精力,而非时间,是高
效、健康与快乐的基础。
这个突破性的观点可以根本改变我们的生活方式。《精力管理》在此观
点的基础上提供了管理精力的方法,核心就是公司型运动员培训体系。该培
训体系源自作者和一些世界上最优秀的运动员25年来的合作,因为在体育界
获得成功,因而得以推广到其他需要高效能的领域,主要是商务领域。许多
名列《财富》500强的公司都是该培训的客户。
《精力管理》将帮助你:
·调动四种关键的精力资源;
·通过周期性补充精力来平衡精力消耗;
·突破舒适区,增强承受力;
·创建详细的、积极的管理精力的仪式。
最重要的是,《精力管理》提供了一张能从此改变你的生活的路线图,
使你体能上充沛、情感上相连、思想上集中,精神上一致,在工作上和工作
之外变得更加投入。
“错误”的行为 豆瓣 谷歌图书
Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics
8.0 (12 个评分) 作者: [美] 理查德·泰勒 译者: 王晋 出版社: 中信出版集团股份有限公司 2016 - 1
准备好改变你对经济学的看法了吗?
纵观理查德·泰勒的职业生涯,我们发现他的研究始终围绕着一个激进的观点开展:经济活动的主体是人,即拥有可预测行为且容易犯错的个体。在《“错误”的行为》一书中,泰勒讲述了他将经济学从高高在上的“象牙塔”带回现实的艰难之旅,其中的故事引人入胜,并且不乏诙谐幽默,彻底改变了我们对经济学、对自己以及对整个世界的看法。
传统经济学的假设前提是,理性的经济人是经济活动的主体。研究伊始,泰勒就意识到人类与《星际迷航》中斯波克那样不懂情感的理性人完全不同。不管是购买闹钟、出售篮球门票,还是申请抵押贷款,我们都会存在某种偏见,所做出的决定与经济学家假设的标准理性模型相去甚远。换句话说,我们的行为并不理性,甚至在传统经济学家看来是“错误”的。更重要的是,这种“错误”的行为会导致严重的后果。起初,经济学家并不屑于研究人们的错误判断及其对市场的影响,他们认为这只是一种引人发笑的“杂耍”,无足轻重。不过,如今这些关于人类行为的研究却帮助我们在工作和生活做出了更好的决定,也促使政府制定出更出色的政策。
泰勒通过人类心理学的近期成果以及他对动机和市场行为的真知灼见,引导读者学习如何在日渐复杂的世界中做出更理智的决定。从家庭理财到学院分办公室,从电视竞猜类节目到美国国家橄榄球联盟选秀,再到优步(Uber)这样的公司,泰勒向我们展示了如何将行为经济学应用到各个领域。
《“错误”的行为》一书中点缀着泰勒与传统经济学思想激烈斗争的有趣故事,以独一无二的方式探索了人类深层次的弱点。当经济学遇到心理学,碰撞出的火花将对个人、管理者和决策者产生深远而充满启发的影响。
Your Brain at Work 豆瓣 Goodreads
作者: David Rock 出版社: Collins Business 2009 - 10
Meet Emily and Paul, the parents of two young children. Emily is a newly promoted executive in a large corporation, while Paul has his own business as a consultant. Their lives, like all of ours, are filled with a bewildering blizzard of emails, phone calls, yet more emails, meetings, projects, proposals, and plans. For them, just staying ahead of the storm has become a seemingly insurmountable task. In this book, we travel inside the brains of Emily and Paul as they attempt to sort the vast quantities of information they're presented with and figure out how to prioritize, organize, and act on it. Fortunately for Emily and Paul—and for readers of Your Brain at Work —they're in good hands: David Rock knows how the brain works—and more specifically, how it works in a work setting. Your Brain at Work explores: Why your brains feels so taxed, and how to take full advantage of your mental resources Why it's so hard to focus, and how to better manage distractions How to maximize your chance of finding insights that can solve seemingly insurmountable problems How to keep your cool in any situation, so that you can make the best decisions possible How to collaborate with others more effectively Why providing feedback is so difficult, and how to make it easier How to effectively change other people's behavior Rock shows how it's possible not only to survive in today's overwhelming work environment but to succeed in it—and still feel energized at the end of the day, with a sense of accomplishment.
向前一步 豆瓣 Goodreads
Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead
8.0 (73 个评分) 作者: [美] 谢丽尔·桑德伯格 译者: 颜筝 出版社: 中信出版社 2013 - 6
● 她是全球最成功的女性之一。她是马克·扎克伯格的左膀右臂,具有天生的管理天赋。
● 她是美国薪酬最高的女高管,被美国媒体誉为「硅谷最有影响力女人」。
● 她身居福布斯百强女性榜第5名,荣登《时代周刊》封面人物, 并被《时代》杂志评为全球最具影响力的人物!
她就是Facebook 首席运营官 谢丽尔·桑德伯格
今天,她奉献上她的最新力作 《向前一步》
激励全球女性勇敢地追求自己的目标,实现事业与家庭生活的完美平衡
强大的推荐阵容:
阳光媒体董事会主席杨澜、SOHO 董事长张欣为本书撰写推荐序
王石、李开复、徐小平、王秋扬、夏华、何振红、王潮歌、徐巍等诸多知名企业家、知名媒体人强力推荐!
从现在开始,LET’S LEAN IN !
本书连续7周荣登亚马逊总榜第一!
连续6周位居《纽约时报》非虚构类畅销书排行榜第一!
作为全球最成功的女性之一,谢丽尔·桑德伯格在本书中深刻地剖析了男女不平等现象的根本原因,解开了女性成功的密码!她认为,女性之所以没有勇气跻身领导层,不敢放开脚步追求自己的梦想,更多是出于内在的恐惧与不自信。她在书中鼓励所有女性,要大胆地「往桌前坐」,主动参与对话与讨论,说出自己的想法。同时,她还为女性提出了如下成功密码,激励女性勇于接受挑战,满怀热情地追求自己的人生目标。
1. 向前一步,勇敢进取
通常女性在总会在无意识中妨碍自己的发展、降低对自己的期望值,甚至很容易就放弃工作、放弃获得更大成就的可能性。与男性相比,女性在职场中的态度仍然不够积极、不够进取。
2.平衡工作与生活
伴侣的支持非常重要。那种认为女性只有抛开家庭才能达到事业巅峰的说法其实并不成立。事实证明,绝大多数的成功女性都拥有一位相当支持自己事业的人生伴侣。
3. 拥有更加开放的心态
女性应该对事业上的挑战持有更开放的心态。如果一份工作能让她学到新的技能,并且更快乐、更满足,那就意味着她在自我提升中不断发展。
女性只有向前一步,勇敢地 “LEAN IN”,才能发挥出自己的潜力,获得事业与家庭的双重平衡,享受成功的幸福人生。
The Number Sense 豆瓣
作者: Stanislas Dehaene 出版社: OUP USA 2011 - 6
Our understanding of how the human brain performs mathematical calculations is far from complete, but in recent years there have been many exciting breakthroughs by scientists all over the world. Now, in The Number Sense, Stanislas Dehaene offers a fascinating look at this recent research, in an enlightening exploration of the mathematical mind. Dehaene begins with the eye-opening discovery that animals--including rats, pigeons, raccoons, and chimpanzees--can perform simple mathematical calculations, and that human infants also have a rudimentary number sense. Dehaene suggests that this rudimentary number sense is as basic to the way the brain understands the world as our perception of color or of objects in space, and, like these other abilities, our number sense is wired into the brain. These are but a few of the wealth of fascinating observations contained here. We also discover, for example, that because Chinese names for numbers are so short, Chinese people can remember up to nine or ten digits at a time--English-speaking people can only remember seven. The book also explores the unique abilities of idiot savants and mathematical geniuses, and we meet people whose minute brain lesions render their mathematical ability useless. This new and completely updated edition includes all of the most recent scientific data on how numbers are encoded by single neurons, and which brain areas activate when we perform calculations. Perhaps most important, The Number Sense reaches many provocative conclusions that will intrigue anyone interested in learning, mathematics, or the mind. "A delight." --Ian Stewart, New Scientist "Read The Number Sense for its rich insights into matters as varying as the cuneiform depiction of numbers, why Jean Piaget's theory of stages in infant learning is wrong, and to discover the brain regions involved in the number sense." --The New York Times Book Review "Dehaene weaves the latest technical research into a remarkably lucid and engrossing investigation. Even readers normally indifferent to mathematics will find themselves marveling at the wonder of minds making numbers." --Booklist
我生活的种种模式 豆瓣
Models of My Life
7.6 (5 个评分) 作者: [美] 赫尔伯特.A.西蒙 译者: 秦裕林 / 出版社: 东方出版中心 1998 - 11
本书是1978年诺贝尔经济学奖得主赫尔伯特・A・西蒙的自传。西蒙是本世纪文理兼通的一位科学奇才。他从研究社科学起步。却在政治科学、经济学、心理学、管理科学、计算机科学和科学哲学等领域颇有建树。从50年代开始,他把关于组织地为决策管理方面的理论应用于经济学,还开创了人工智能,认知科学和信处理心理学等新学科,开辟了探索人类思维和智能的新天地。全书分四部分,西蒙用一个跨学科专家的眼光扫描了20世纪下半叶众多学科领域的发展以及世界政治、经济局势的变化。其间他还以时间和地域为经纬,穿插点缀着自己对生活、爱情、友谊及科研等往事的回忆。从内向聪慧的孩提时期的种种轶事,到成年后获诺贝尔奖时的庄严时刻,作者个人的历史伴随着他幽默智慧的语言,活跃机敏的思想渐次闪现了出来,与时代的背景融合在一起,绘成了一幅五色斑谰的人生画卷。读完本书,任何喜欢思考的人都不难发现,现代科技与社会科学相结合后会对人类社会产生多么深远的影响。
信息安全工程 豆瓣
作者: [英] 安德森 译者: 齐宁 / 韩智文 出版社: 清华大学出版社 2012 - 1
本书第1版于2001年问世后,受到了全球广大读者的热烈欢迎。今天的安全领域已经发生了巨大变化:垃圾邮件发送者、病毒编写者、网络钓鱼者、洗钱者以及间谍们的作案水平不断提升,搜索引擎、社交网络乃至电子投票机等新领域都成为这些犯罪者们新的攻击目标,恐怖事件也对世界产生了深远影响。《信息安全工程(第2版)》针对这些新情况全面更新了第1版的内容,指导您构建能够轻松抵御恶意攻击的可靠系统。本书表述准确、讲解清晰,是安全工程领域的鸿篇巨著,涵盖的内容包括工程技术基础、攻击类型、专用保护机制、安全经济学和安全心理学等,适合所有对安全工程感兴趣的读者使用。
瞬变 豆瓣
Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard
8.0 (11 个评分) 作者: [美] 奇普·希思 / [美] 丹·希思 译者: 姜奕晖 出版社: 中信出版社 2014 - 4
本书上一版书名为《瞬变》,本次重新修订上市。
改变,是我们生活中始终要面对的问题。有时,我们主动想要改变——不再拖延,不再懒散,不再逃避;有时,环境的变化要求我们改变——市场竞争,婚姻危机,工作掉队……但不管多么必要,我们却发现改变如此痛苦,又如此艰难。为什么?怎么办?
世界一流的行为心理学家希思兄弟看来,阻碍我们进行改变的重要原因,是我们希望变革的理智思考与已经存在惰性的情感需求不合拍,两者互相牵制使得我们难以做出改变。他们借用了一组有趣的比喻:人类的情感与理智,就如大象和骑象人:骑象人希望走向自己的目的地,但存在惰性的大象却不听使唤仍在原地踯躅不前。 头脑(骑象人)是生活的方向盘,情感(大象)则是生活的动力源,而环境则是生活的公路,给骑象人提供方向。三者结合,改变就能发生。
人的情感和理智并不是完全一致的。尤其是面对你要改变过去养成的一些坏习惯,更是积重难返。意志力并不擅长持久战,自制是一种爆发性的力量,调动起来很好,但是很快就衰退了。所以,不要太过于责怪自己没有意志力,人性使然。
改变不是一个意志力的考验,意志在这起不了多大作用。改变是个智慧的考验,如何去用理智指导情感,而不要去用意志力去试图战胜情感。理智只是一个骑手,而情感是一头大象。运用意志力,骑手也许能驾驭大象一时;但是当大象按照自己的性子来的时候,骑手之力是无法控制这头庞然大物的。