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15 oeuvres 528 utilisateurs 4 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Kent M. Keith earned his B.A. from Harvard, and was a Rhodes scholar at Oxford and Tokyo. He has a law degree and a doctorate in education. Dr. Keith has been an attorney, a state government official, a high-tech park developer, president of a private university, and a YMCA leader. He lives in afficher plus Honolulu, Hawai'i with his wife and three children afficher moins
Crédit image: Copyright Eye On Books.

Œuvres de Kent M. Keith

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1949
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Lieux de résidence
Nebraska, California, Virginia, Rhode Island and Hawaii

Membres

Critiques

The paradoxical commandments for Christians illustrat through Bible stories and verse.
 
Signalé
phoovermt | Mar 26, 2024 |
from dust jacket

'The Paradoxical Comandments do not focus on popular symbols of success like wealth, powr, and fame. Instead, they focus on meaning-themeaning you can get from loving others, doing good, being honest, thinking big, fighting for underdogs, building, helping others, and giving the world the best you've got. Each action you take can be enough, in and of itself, whether anything else follows from it. When you live the Paradoxical Commandments, each action you take will be complete, because each action will bring its own meaning...When you live the paradoxical life, you will find personal meaning in a crazy world. You will make a difference. You will change lives. One of the lives you change will be your own.'-from Anyway

from cover

These ten principles were first articulated by Kent Keith as a student at Harvard in the 1960s. Since then, unbbeknownst to him, they were quoted, circulated, and appropriated by countless people-politicians and academics, civic and religious leaders, businesspeople, students, and nonprofit organizations. they were taped to computer monitors, refrigerator doors, and to the walls of Mother Teresa's children's home in calcutta.

It was upon learnng of this last appearance that Kent Keith finally began to discover that his Paradoxical Commandments had traveled around the world and back again. And he was moved to put his commandments, the philosophy behind them, and the stories that bring them to life into this modern credo for living well, being happy...and doing good anyway.

Contents

Foreword
Introduction
It's a Crazy World
The Paradoxical Commandments
Living the Paradoxical Life
Acknowledgments
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
AikiBib | May 29, 2022 |
I have quite a few of what I call "self-help" or "inspirational" type books. Most tend to be short reads and usually a lot of the same themes. I found this book to be much better than most. All the premises of the Paradoxical commandments are that by doing good and doing whats right you may not get any recognition or rewards but just do it anyway. I found this to be a better point of view. People that are genuine don't need applause and reward but rather the act of giving are doing are reward enough in itself. The book is short and a quick read but I think it's very worthwhile and will probably be a book you may want to read more than once.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
realbigcat | 1 autre critique | Oct 24, 2008 |
Ever wondered why you’re here? Or thought it’s not worth trying anymore, the Earth’s a hole anyway? I have. That’s why I picked up this book. I’ve never really been into self-help books, but this one is very short, so I chose it - I read it in three hours. Short and simple it may be, but it’s a great book and everyone should read it. If everyone did, there would be no greed, spite, jealousy, revenge or any desire for personal glory that generally leads to all these fucked up things.

Kent M. Keith claims that if you live by these Commandments, you will not need recognition of the good you achieve; it’s the personal meaning and satisfaction that we get from this good that is worth more than all the applause in the world. He explains the infinite benefits of unconditional love, of being good, honest and frank, of listening to your heart, of helping grumpy, smelly old men that spew up their food as soon as they’ve eaten it and of giving life everything you’ve got, despite your chances of getting kicked in the teeth for all these efforts. In short, this book is inspiration to be the best person you can, despite the fact that it might be to no avail. That’s the paradox. Despite what we all think, abandoning our search for success and recognition in our respective fields and beginning our journey to simply be honest, good-natured people, will give us the meaning in our lives that we all secretly yearn for.

This is not the first time the Paradoxical Commandments have been seen in this world. In fact, they were written over 30 years ago, by the same author and about twenty five years later, were found in a book about Mother Teresa. They had been stuck on the wall in one of Mother Teresa’s homes in Calcutta, to be read and remembered by all her children. These Commandments establish principles that the followers of this saintly woman thought worthy of sticking on their wall! If that doesn’t tell you that this book will help you, then you must think you’re perfect.

The Paradoxical Commandments can be found on the net but without this book, which explains the philosophy and experiences behind the creation of them, the benefits are only half reaped. This book is an eye opener, and if you like a book that makes you think, it’s perfect for you.

PS. You will notice I have said nothing bad about this book. That’s because there is nothing bad to say. It is the most brilliant book I have read in years.

This review was originally published in On Dit, the student newspaper of Adelaide University.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
RyanPaine | 1 autre critique | Sep 7, 2008 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
15
Membres
528
Popularité
#47,121
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
4
ISBN
42
Langues
8
Favoris
1

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