

This is what if claims to be: a primer. You get some big picture ideas, core principles, and a broad understanding of why systems level analysis has value, but not a lot that's actionable on its own.
It's not a bad starting point, but you'll need more.
This is what if claims to be: a primer. You get some big picture ideas, core principles, and a broad understanding of why systems level analysis has value, but not a lot that's actionable on its own.
It's not a bad starting point, but you'll need more.

Added to listIntelligencewith 76 books.

I'm not usually sensitive to repetition, and often see books of this nature talked about as repetitive when I feel their examples are broad and varied. This book is an exception. Many concepts are repeated with relatively little variation, many times. However, I believe this is intentional due to the intent of this book.
The core concept here (and of the cognitive behavioral therapy approach it's built to explain/complement) is to replace harmful patterns of thought with healthier counters and to short circuit harmful loops. Repetition is necessarily part of that, and there's some evidence* that reading the book itself constitutes a moderately effective treatment for depression. Because I believe the repetition and punching you in the face with the "obvious" at times are deliberate and for valid reasons, I wouldn't dock the book for it, but for me personally, I would have liked it edited down slightly.
*https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20803165/
I'm not usually sensitive to repetition, and often see books of this nature talked about as repetitive when I feel their examples are broad and varied. This book is an exception. Many concepts are repeated with relatively little variation, many times. However, I believe this is intentional due to the intent of this book.
The core concept here (and of the cognitive behavioral therapy approach it's built to explain/complement) is to replace harmful patterns of thought with healthier counters and to short circuit harmful loops. Repetition is necessarily part of that, and there's some evidence* that reading the book itself constitutes a moderately effective treatment for depression. Because I believe the repetition and punching you in the face with the "obvious" at times are deliberate and for valid reasons, I wouldn't dock the book for it, but for me personally, I would have liked it edited down slightly.
*https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20803165/