Free photoshop tutorials
 


The Power of Persuasion: How We’re Bought and Sold

  • 2,020 views
  • In: Miscelleanous
  • Author : Pachino
  • 1 vote, average: 4 out of 51 vote, average: 4 out of 51 vote, average: 4 out of 51 vote, average: 4 out of 51 vote, average: 4 out of 5 (1 votes, average: 4 out of 5)
    You need to be a registered member to rate this post.
    Loading ... Loading ...

    This valuable and nonacademic guide reveals the extent to which we are surrounded by persuasion, and how we can resist. Levine (A Geography of Time), a professor of psychology at Cal State Fresno, opens by demonstrating that all of us (including himself) can be persuaded under the right circumstances. He goes on to study financial manipulation and the use of the sense of obligation (which exists in all cultures, even if it is most strongly visible in Japan), and then proceeds to a nuts-and-bolts analysis of salesmanship by describing what he learned and did (and had done to him) as an automobile salesman. He offers an admirably concise and unemotional analysis of the famous Milgram experiment, involving the (claimed) administration of ever-stronger electric shocks to test the impulse to obedience. Inevitably, he moves to cults, the Moonies and the ultimate persuasion horror story, Jonestown. Not so inevitably, he avoids hysteria and demonization, even of Jim Jones, and points out that brute force is required at the extreme end of the persuasion spectrum. Levine’s final chapter offers ways of dealing with unwelcome persuasion while remaining part of a society in which some persuasion is part of almost any social interaction. The final results are bout as far as possible from the shrill Hidden Persuaders tradition or the cult deprogrammers who become cult gurus themselves-and quite persuasive about the author’s credentials, common sense and ethics.

    This valuable and nonacademic guide reveals the extent to which we are surrounded by persuasion, and how we can resist. Levine (A Geography of Time), a professor of psychology at Cal State Fresno, opens by demonstrating that all of us (including himself) can be persuaded under the right circumstances. He goes on to study financial manipulation and the use of the sense of obligation (which exists in all cultures, even if it is most strongly visible in Japan), and then proceeds to a nuts-and-bolts analysis of salesmanship by describing what he learned and did (and had done to him) as an automobile salesman. He offers an admirably concise and unemotional analysis of the famous Milgram experiment, involving the (claimed) administration of ever-stronger electric shocks to test the impulse to obedience. Inevitably, he moves to cults, the Moonies and the ultimate persuasion horror story, Jonestown. Not so inevitably, he avoids hysteria and demonization, even of Jim Jones, and points out that brute force is required at the extreme end of the persuasion spectrum. Levine’s final chapter offers ways of dealing with unwelcome persuasion while remaining part of a society in which some persuasion is part of almost any social interaction. The final results are bout as far as possible from the shrill Hidden Persuaders tradition or the cult deprogrammers who become cult gurus themselves-and quite persuasive about the author’s credentials, common sense and ethics.

    Download Here 807 KB

    del.icio.us:The Power of Persuasion: How We're Bought and Solddigg:The Power of Persuasion: How We're Bought and Soldblinklist:The Power of Persuasion: How We're Bought and Soldreddit:The Power of Persuasion: How We're Bought and SoldY!:The Power of Persuasion: How We're Bought and Sold

    Random Posts

    2 Responses to “The Power of Persuasion: How We’re Bought and Sold

    • Emanuel1140
      November 4th, 2006 12:09
      1

      This is a great book. For the book I give it a 4.9 out of 5. For the post though I have to give it a 2.4 out of 5 as while it includes the index, the notes are missing. The book is heavy on notes nd they are necessary to using it as a research teching tool or just for student papers. It is a classic book though and well worth the exercise of just reading for enjoyment.

    • ragoel
      July 17th, 2008 14:01
      2

      Pls upload the link again

    Leave a Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.