Quiet The Power of Introverts in a World - No Cost Library
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking Crown Publishing Group Broadway
Author(s): Susan Cain
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group Broadway, Year: 2014
Description:
Using science studies, this book may change the way you view people who are different from you, which can even change how you see yourself.
Our everyday lives are guided by the unspoken truth that, most of us, don't understand and can't name. The self in this case is described as who our friends and lovers are, which professions we want to follow, and whether we blush when we're embarrassed.
So, how about the science of whether we are an introvert or an extrovert.
The most basic component of personality, at least a third of us, are introverted, which means that these individuals are somewhat reserved, attentive to their surroundings and serious about the topic they are debating. Any of the world's greatest creativity is inside the domain of introverts - without them, we wouldn't have the Apple machine, the theory of relativity, or Van Gogh's sunflowers. In " Quiet ," Susan Cain tells us how people are underserving the quiet styles and yet how they themselves could make their own lives their best and brightest such as being more assertive.
This novel is incredibly well written, and makes stronger scientific claims than most novels. It did help me think about who people are in a positive way, and that I do not view them in a negative way.
The '**/'.
I can't get the Silent movie out of my head. It is a very significant book - so compelling and so timely and so sincere that it will eventually affect progress in society and throughout the educational field as well.
"Susan Cain's Quiet", by Susan Cain, has sparked a quiet movement. In the view of Megan Walsh of The Times, maybe administrators and executives will do better to get out of their chairs and lean forward toward those they supervise.
'Maybe the extrovert ideal is no longer as strong as it was; maybe it is time we all stopped to listen to the quiet, tiny voice of calm' Daisy Goodwin, The Sunday Times
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