Good Living
Good Living, Reviews
Review: Mind Over Mood
Daniel Wahl November 20, 2010
Daniel Wahl reviews Mind Over Mood: Change How You Feel by Changing the Way You Think, by Dennis Greenberger and Christine A. Padesky.
Good Living, Reviews
Review: The Flaw of Averages, by Sam L. Savage
David H. Mirman August 20, 2010
David H. Mirman reviews The Flaw of Averages: Why We Underestimate Risk in the Face of Uncertainty, by Sam L. Savage.
Good Living, Philosophy
Making Life Meaningful: Living Purposefully
Craig Biddle February 20, 2010
Identifies and concretizes the principles by means of which one can fill one’s life with meaning and joy.
Good Living, Reviews
Review: Getting Things Done, by David Allen
Amy Peikoff May 20, 2009
Amy Peikoff reviews Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity, by David Allen.
Good Living, Reviews
Review: Predictably Irrational, by Dan Ariely
Eric Daniels February 20, 2009
Eric Daniels reviews Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions, by Dan Ariely.
Arts & Culture, Good Living
Doubt vs. Certainty
Veronica Ryan February 20, 2009
Casts certainty on why the movie Doubt is leaving viewers wondering whether they can know anything for sure.
Good Living, Science & Technology
Demystifying Newton: The Force Behind the Genius
Veronica Ryan November 20, 2008
Presents key evidence in support of the basic motive that drove Isaac Newton to decode the nature of the physical world, and leaves the widely accepted Freudian view of his motive wanting.
Arts & Culture, Good Living
Mr. Jekyll and Dr. House: The Reason-Emotion Split as Manifested in House, M.D.
Veronica Ryan November 20, 2006
Examines the popular television series House, M.D., zeros in on its main flaw—acceptance of the reason-emotion dichotomy and all that it entails—and shows why this potentially excellent show is tragically mixed.
Good Living, Philosophy
The Educational, Psychological, and Philosophical Assault on Self-Esteem
Edwin A. Locke November 20, 2006
Examines the misconceptions of self-esteem that are widely accepted and propagated by educators and psychologists today, illustrates the philosophical causes of those misconceptions in modern philosophy, and presents the correct view of self-esteem along with its philosophical roots in rational philosophy.