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How to Think
How to Think: A Survival Guide for a World at Odds | Alan Jacobs
How to Think is a contrarian treatise on why we're not as good at thinking as we assume--but how recovering this lost art can rescue our inner lives from the chaos of modern life. As a celebrated cultural critic and a writer for national publications like The Atlantic and Harper's, Alan Jacobs has spent his adult life belonging to communities that often clash in America's culture wars. And in his years of confronting the big issues that divide us--political, social, religious--Jacobs has learned that many of our fiercest disputes occur not because we're doomed to be divided, but because the people involved simply aren't thinking. Most of us don't want to think, Jacobs writes. Thinking is trouble. Thinking can force us out of familiar, comforting habits, and it can complicate our relationships with like-minded friends. Finally, thinking is slow, and that's a problem when our habits of consuming information (mostly online) leave us lost in the spin cycle of social media, partisan bickering, and confirmation bias. In this smart, endlessly entertaining book, Jacobs diagnoses the many forces that act on us to prevent thinking--forces that have only worsened in the age of Twitter, "alternative facts," and information overload--and he also dispels the many myths we hold about what it means to think well. (For example: It's impossible to "think for yourself.") Drawing on sources as far-flung as novelist Marilynne Robinson, basketball legend Wilt Chamberlain, British philosopher John Stuart Mill, and Christian theologian C.S. Lewis, Jacobs digs into the nuts and bolts of the cognitive process, offering hope that each of us can reclaim our mental lives from the impediments that plague us all. Because if we can learn to think together, maybe we can learn to live together, too.
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CRR
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Pickpick

A good and refreshing book to read about thinking about the way we think. We are living in a divided time where everyone that disagrees with us is automatically less smart. Many are losing the ability to disagree kindly. This book helps keep that mature ability to handle and manage ambiguity which is always around us.

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masakrasa
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Apparently I need instructions 🤷‍♀️

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Thndrstd
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Pickpick

A thoughtful book about what it means to truly think, to examine one's own motivations and sense of belonging to a group. Citing numerous sources both contemporary and classic, this is a fast-reading book that questions and ponders our current conditions of polarity and insularity as they worsen.

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BatsInTheLibrary
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An important point, especially these days.

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Waynegjr
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I love me some Alan Jacobs. Reading this spiritual follow up to his awesome Pleasures of Reading in an Age of Distraction.

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mkinney10
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This was a great book and very ambitious in scope. I listened to the audio but think the physical book would have been a better option to stop and look up people and places referenced right away.