Join 📚 Favorites And Reflection Questions
A batch of the best highlights from what Todd's read, .
Science has provided guidance: Ask others about their beliefs and values. Ask them about experiences and those moments that caused them to change. Ask how they feel, rather than about facts. Reframe your questions so they are deeper. Ask follow-ups. And as people expose their vulnerabilities, reveal something about yourself. It will be less uncomfortable than you imagine. It will be more fascinating than you think. And it might lead to a moment of true connection.
Supercommunicators
Charles Duhigg
Do you try to avoid biasing the information you get? …do you describe disagreement without revealing which side you were on, so as to avoid influencing your friend's answer? When you launch a new project at work, do you decide ahead of time what will count as a success and what will count as a failure…?
The Scout Mindset
Julia Galef
Democracy, by strenuously denying the fact of inequality, does enable us, to a surprising extent, to act as if it didn’t exist; but it does exist, and we know it. So our job is to keep the inequity of power as small as possible, and refuse to let our common humanity be reduced, however slightly, even by a careless word, by an assertion of unequal worth.
No Time to Spare
Ursula K. Le Guin, Karen Joy Fowler (Introduction)
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