1. Many things in life are incredibly simple. 2. There are a lot of smart people in the world (you're probably one of them). So why is it that so many truly daft things get done? Simply Brilliant is the smart person's guide to the incredibly straightforward stuff that may have been overlooked in the search for a complex answer. With a whole new section on extreme time management, you'll be able to produce outstanding results without having to work all night. Sometimes the smart need the simple to be truly brilliant. "Just when we feel we can no longer cope with it all, someone writes a book that offers salvation ... Simply Brilliant is brilliantly simple - so much so that I may start coming to work again to get things done." Financial Times "For a change this guide tears down management as a complex science, reducing it to life saving basics. This book does a good job - it may just help to simplify your working life." The Evening Standard "Simply Brilliant could make a difference to huge numbers of managers...O'Connell's ideas for creating a better working environment are as simple as he claims and will provide welcome relief for anyone who is struggling to come to terms with the latest fad from the Harvard Business School..." The Sunday Times - Book of the Week
Such sensitivity to initial conditions is called chaotic (Grebogi and Yorke, 1997; Stewart, 2002). Not to forget that many systems we try to study in a quantitative manner (for instance, the epigenetic regulation of our chromatin or the ...
The Commonsense Book of a Countrywoman
An Introduction to Probability Theory and Its Applications, vol. I, New York: Wiley. ... An imaging study of deductive and inductive reasoning, NeuroReport 8:1305–1310. ... Nomic Probability and the Foundations of Induction.
Rant-filled but eloquent, shocking but intelligent, this is bestselling author Corey Taylor at his most Corey Taylor and he doesn't leave himself out either... turns out he's just as f***ing stupid as the rest of us, too."
This book is about the fictitious Seeker, who has known a lot of misery, and his visit to the "Library of Wisdom" where he meets another fictitious character - the Librarian - along with Warren Buffett and Charles Munger.
A Philosophy of Common Sense: The Modern Discovery of the Epistemic Foundations of Science and Belief
A Philosophy of Common Sense: The Modern Discovery of the Epistemic Foundations of Science and Belief