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15 oeuvres 345 utilisateurs 4 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Benjamin Hardy is a psychologist, writer, and entrepreneur who lives in Clemson. South Carolina with his wife. Lauren, and their three children. His work has been featured in Forbes, Psychology Today, Fortune, and Mashable, and he is the #1 most-read writer on Medium.com.

Œuvres de Benjamin Hardy

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I am sure the author is a very nice person but this is self-help fascism in the sense that what he offers is not a dorection to self actualisation but some sort of militaristic struggle to achieve with a capital A.

Commit to make 10x the money you made! This is the prime example of idiocy, firstly what if you made very very little then this is automatically achievable, secondly what if you made a huge amount because you are in a high paying job, is it even possible to earn 10x? And in any case how does that relate to self actualisation?

Some information is valuable, many of the experiments he recounts are inspiring but the overall philosophy of life seems sick to me.
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Signalé
yates9 | 2 autres critiques | Feb 28, 2024 |
Limited tactics for diverse lifestyles, capabilities, and capacities. No references.
 
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Sovranty | 2 autres critiques | Dec 3, 2023 |
Saw Ben Hardy at the Craft and Commerce conference and he gave a great talk. This book expounds on some of those ideas and it’s a quick and provocative read.
 
Signalé
JohnMatthewFox | Oct 17, 2022 |
Looking at all the positive reviews I can't help but wonder if Benjamin Hardy fans have invaded all the early reviews.

This is a blog post masquerading as a bad book. The entire message can be summed up into: "Your environment influences the person you are, so structure an environment that helps you be a person you want to be." There, I just saved you from reading a mind-numbing 200 pages in which the author repeats this idea ad-nauseum, never aware that this is not the least bit controversial.

Mr. Hardy wrote another cliched self-help book that uses misapplied science (jumping fleas!) and poor analogies to hammer a simplistic message. Its as if he did all his research watching TED talks, wrote a blog post, leveraged that into a book and filled it with hot air.
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Signalé
xopher | 2 autres critiques | Mar 7, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
15
Membres
345
Popularité
#69,185
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
4
ISBN
29
Langues
2

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