Carol Dweck’s Mindset. While unfortunately it has the cover of a self-help book, it’s actually a summary of some fascinating psychology research which shows that a certain way of conceptualizing self-improvement tends to be unusually effective at it.
The main insight of the book is very simple to state. However, the insight was so fundamental that it required me to update a great number of other beliefs I had, so I found being able to read a book’s worth of examples of it being applied over and over again was helpful and enjoyable. YMMV.
I took a look at Mindset. The book seemed to me extremely repetitive and rambling. Its teachings could be condensed in an article ten or fifteen times shorter. Fortunately, this Stanford Magazine piece seems to accomplish something close to that. So, read the piece, and forget the book.
Carol Dweck’s Mindset. While unfortunately it has the cover of a self-help book, it’s actually a summary of some fascinating psychology research which shows that a certain way of conceptualizing self-improvement tends to be unusually effective at it.
Free pdf of Mindset.
Reviews seem to indicate that the book can and should be condensed into a couple quality insights. Is there any reason to buy the actual book?
The main insight of the book is very simple to state. However, the insight was so fundamental that it required me to update a great number of other beliefs I had, so I found being able to read a book’s worth of examples of it being applied over and over again was helpful and enjoyable. YMMV.
I took a look at Mindset. The book seemed to me extremely repetitive and rambling. Its teachings could be condensed in an article ten or fifteen times shorter. Fortunately, this Stanford Magazine piece seems to accomplish something close to that. So, read the piece, and forget the book.