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A very worthwhile book that demonstrates how easily we can be influenced. It is the sort of book that you find yourself wondering why you get so easily lead astray when it all seems so inappropriate in the clear light of day.Some of the examples given in the book certainly appear strange until they are dissected and the human behavioral patterns are analysed and explained.If you are interested to understand better how the mind works and how it can be influenced by factors around it then this book is certainly worth your time to read. Conversely if you are interested to learn how your thinking process may be being manipulated then this is also probably a very worthwhile read.
This is a very good book that generally conveys research in this area quite well. The authors did violate the Law of Parsimony (the simplest, most straight forward explanation is most likely correct). They wandered into the area of unreplicated pseudoscience when reporting that competing areas of the brain determined choice behavior, ignoring reinforcement and conditioning. Despite this shortcoming, the book was valuable to psychologist and non psychologist alike.Maurice Regan.
If you are familiar with the subject, it will remind you of Psych 101 with flashbacks to social loafing, group think, and cognitive dissonance. I listened to the audio version while driving on a recent trip and was not impressed. I felt though that Gladwell offered more depth on his conclusive synopsis'. Not to say that Mr. This was my problem. The content is supposed to be similar to Gladwell's Blink (which was why my mother gave it to me). SWAY is a great read for anyone unfamiliar with behavioral psychology. Gladwell does a superb job narrating.
Four stars regardless, great content and well written--just not what I was looking for. Perhaps I was cheated though because the last audiobook I listened to was by Malcolm Gladwell. I would say that its cross reference to Blink perhaps SWAYED me in my initial perception of how the book was written, but I will not let that bias block me from applauding the Brafmans. It has a strength though in terms of self-improvement, it offers concise direct insight on decision making rationale (perhaps more than Gladwell). Furthermore, the entire book bring you back to the case studies from that 101 class. Braffan does a poor job, they actually do a fairly good one but there is something compelling about the way Gladwell speaks to the reader in the audio version.
SWAY sort of seemed to speak generally about cases. I received both the paperback and unabridged audiobook for Christmas. I've skimmed through the paperback and it looks like a quick read, I will save it for a beach day in the future. Freakonomics next.
I don't say this often but this really is a page turner. After reading this book once, I find myself going back and rereading portions just to make sure that I'm not "swayed" in real life. I love the tone and voice of this book, it feels as if the author is discovering these insights right next to you instead of bestowing knowledge on you. I would recommend this book to anyone with an open mind and likes an easy yet griping read.
This very short book is more like a long article. Some interesting stories, but not much in the way of self-help or whatever the point of the book is.
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