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Book Review: A Whole New Mind

Book | Author | Review

By , SAP AG – July 15, 2005

In this book review, the writer takes a personal look at the book A Whole New Mind by Daniel H. Pink.

 

Book

Cover of  A Whole New Mind     

Daniel H. Pink
A Whole New Mind: Moving from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age

Riverhead, 2005
ISBN: 1573223085

General

 

Author

Photo of Daniel H. Pink Daniel H. Pink, former White House speechwriter, is author of the bestseller "Free Agent Nation" and pioneer of the "Me, Inc." movement in USA. He is a contributing editor at Wired magazine. His articles on business and technology have also appeared in The New York Times, Harvard Business Review, Fast Company, and other publications.
(From book biography, adapted)

Dan invites you to visit him at his website www.danpink.com.

 

Review

In the first part of the book, Daniel Pink examines our Western society – with dominant professions in the area of information technologies – and identifies three major forces:

So this is the situation, but what's happening next? The author takes a closer look at the schemes behind society's changes: "We've progressed from the Agriculture Age (farmers) to the Industrial Age (factory workers) to the Information Age (knowledge workers), and will move on to the Conceptual Age (creators, empathizers, pattern recognizers, and meaning makers)." To point out the difference the author uses as a metaphor the two sides of the brain and their integration to a whole new mind – the psychologists among you will know what is meant.

But how can we prepare ourselves for the Conceptual Age? The second part of the book is devoted to six aptitudes (or "senses") that the author has distilled as essential. Each chapter of these aptitudes offers a portfolio such as magazines and books for further reading, Websites, everyday tips, experiments, and exercises to develop your abilities.

Résumé

This book is said to mark a turning point – maybe it does.

Compelling and enjoyable to read, it offers plenty of insights and inspiration. It doesn't teach a specific method that you could follow in your daily work process, but can be of great value in strengthening your abilities in project management, presentation, creative design, or product planning.

 

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