We have met the enemy : self-control in an age of excess / Daniel Akst.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Female Library | BF632 .A35 2011 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000100218 | |
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Main Library | BF632 .A35 2011 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000130789 |
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BF575.S75 .S773 2017 V.1 Stress in the modern world : understanding science and society / | BF575.S75 .S773 2017 V.2 Stress in the modern world : understanding science and society Volume 2 [...] | BF611 .S38 2004 The paradox of choice : why more is less / | BF632 .A35 2011 We have met the enemy : self-control in an age of excess / | BF632 .H69 2016 One second ahead : enhance your performance at work with mindfulness / | BF632 .H69 2016 One second ahead : enhance your performance at work with mindfulness / | BF636.67 .E85 2017 Ethical and legal issues in counseling children and adolescents / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [279]-292) and index.
A witty and wide-ranging investigation of the central problem of our time: how to save ourselves from what we want. This is journalist Akst's irreverent search for answers, delving into overeating, overspending, procrastination, anger, addiction, wayward sexual attraction and most of the other homely transgressions that bedevil us daily in a world of freedom, prosperity and technological empowerment. Akst ransacks history, literature, psychology, philosophy and economics to alarm, teach, empower and, at the very least, entertain. Using self-control as a lens rather than a cudgel, he draws a vivid picture of the many-sided problem of desire--and delivers a blueprint for how we can steer shrewdly toward the wants we most want for ourselves. At stake is not just our health but our humanity, for what could make us more fully human than the ability to set aside impulse when we choose to do so?--From publisher description.
A democracy of excess -- Sickening excess -- On having yourself committed -- The cost of good inventions -- The perils of prosperity -- Self-control and social change -- The Greek way -- The marshmallow test -- The seesaw struggle -- Let my people go -- The intimate contest -- The mind-body problem -- Self-control, free will, and other oxymorons -- Odysseus and the pigeons -- Crimes of passion -- Addiction, compulsion, and choice -- Tomorrow is another day -- Cutting loose -- Government and self-government -- Being your own godfather -- Carpe Diem.
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