List Price: $27.00Our Price: $17.82 You Save: $9.18 (34%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 153.753
EAN: 9781416541981
ISBN: 1416541985
Label: Free Press
Manufacturer: Free Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 368
Publication Date: August 05, 2008
Publisher: Free Press
Sales Rank: 6888
Studio: Free Press
Related Items:
Editorial Review:
Product Description: Your every significant choice -- every important decision you make -- is determined by a force operating deep inside your mind: your perspective on time -- your internal, personal time zone. This is the most influential force in your life, yet you are virtually unaware of it. Once you become aware of your personal time zone, you can begin to see and manage your life in exciting new ways.
In The Time Paradox, Drs. Zimbardo and Boyd draw on thirty years of pioneering research to reveal, for the first time, how your individual time perspective shapes your life and is shaped by the world around you. Further, they demonstrate that your and every other individual's time zones interact to create national cultures, economics, and personal destinies.
You will discover what time zone you live in through Drs. Zimbardo and Boyd's revolutionary tests. Ask yourself:
• Does the smell of fresh-baked cookies bring you back to your childhood?
• Do you believe that nothing will ever change in your world?
• Do you believe that the present encompasses all and the future and past are mere abstractions?
• Do you wear a watch, balance your checkbook, and make to-do lists -- every day?
• Do you believe that life on earth is merely preparation for life after death?
• Do you ruminate over failed relationships?
• Are you the life of every party -- always late, always laughing, and always broke?
These statements are representative of the seven most common ways people relate to time, each of which, in its extreme, creates benefits and pitfalls. The Time Paradox is a practical plan for optimizing your blend of time perspectives so you get the utmost out of every minute in your personal and professional life as well as a fascinating commentary about the power and paradoxes of time in the modern world.
No matter your time perspective, you experience these paradoxes. Only by understanding this new psychological science of time zones will you be able to overcome the mental biases that keep you too attached to the past, too focused on immediate gratification, or unhealthily obsessed with future goals. Time passes no matter what you do -- it's up to you to spend it wisely and enjoy it well. Here's how.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
Philip Zimbardo has been influencing the way I think about life for many, many years now. I originally discovered him on PBS psychology specials long ago and was fascinated by what he had to say back then and still today. He's one of those people you discover in a lifetime, that draws your attention whenever he decides to pop out and have something to say. He doesn't do it often, but when he does, I want to hear it and I wasn't disappointed. He has such a wonderful, clear way of speaking and explaining ... Read More
Rating: -
We haven't bought the book yet. We listened to Zimbardo's talk to the Commonwealth Club and discussed his work in relation to our own family and found it quite worthwhile.
One is automatically suspicious of any metaphor-paradigm that explains everything from individual behavior to the relationships between nations. Still, there's a lot to think about here.
Valuable, challenging, and worthwhile. Listen to the Commonwealth Club's presentation and then decide if you want to ... Read More
Rating: -
This book shows that people view time in different psychological ways. The authors divide people into different time perspectives of past-negative, past-positive, present-hedonistic, present-fatalistic, holistic-present, future, and transcendental-future. There are tests in the book and online at [...]. The test will show you how high you rate in all the different time perspectives. There are positives and negatives for each, a balance among them is better than rating extremely high in one. Past-negatives ... Read More
Rating: -
Psychology mumbo-jumbo. Authors confuse Causal and Correlation effects. The authors have a hammer, and they search and find nails to pound with it. They attribute nearly everything in life to their concept. It is poor science.
Rating: -
About: Boyd and Zimbardo put forth that one's perspective of time (how one views the past, present and future) affects most all of a person's life. Includes Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory to measure your time perspectives
Pros: Interesting premise, easy to read, neat asides like lists of fairy tales and songs about time, sources cited.
Cons: I'm wary of single theories that try to explain all aspects of a person's life. Some sections seem a bit out of place, like the long list ... Read More
Browse for similar items by category:
|