
Critical Thinking: 2 in 1 Combo
How to Use Rationality and Intelligence as a Moral Compass
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Compra ahora por $19.95
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Narrado por:
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Jada Antoine
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De:
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Melissa Robertos
You have just bumped into a great deal with a unique combo of two different books, which cover topics on critical thinking, rationality, and using intelligence as a moral compass.This is one of the best books about these particular sub-topics.
Book one:
What is cognitive relativism? How does one use objectivity effectively? How can we analyze ourselves and time?
These and a myriad of other questions related to the topic of critical thinking will be answered in this guide.
You will be able to understand yourself and your thought processes better, as well as step away from subjective reasoning more often. If more people would take a closer look at these kinds of qualities, a lot of problems in the society would be solved.
Be unique in that sense and give this a go. Learn about the more popular term “critical thinking” and what it can do for you. You will not regret it.
Book two:
Society needs deep thinkers. It needs people who don’t blindly follow the crowd. It needs people who can think for themselves.
But how do you go about doing this?
Well, one of the first things to be able to control better is your emotions. This book will touch on that as it covers the basics and more of stoicism, points out how to overcome stress factors, and shows how predispositions can more easily put aside.
Last but not least, the way these patterns, feelings, and this logic are discussed in the classroom is laid out.
Quotes about happiness, self-deceptions, and ethical principles will be thrown into the intellectual, literary debate.
Click on the "buy now" button to get the audiobook.
©2020 Melissa Robertos (P)2020 Melissa RobertosListeners also enjoyed...




















Not bad
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Not too shabby
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Excellent
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Loved it
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Pretty impressive
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Engaging
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Perfect
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No complaints
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Narration...
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And that mispronunciation isn't the reader's fault. She should have had a voice director telling her how the words were supposed to be pronounced. But I don't think she had one. I think she recorded it on her own. A VD would have told her to reread entire sentences when she flubbed a line instead of rereading just the word or restarting the sentence on the word she flubbed. But she didn't, so clearly some poor editor had to cobble together different takes to the point where each sentence is a Frankenstein's monster and sentences are a mix of jumbled cadences, stresses, and mispronunciations. If they were going to cheap out on a voice director, this woman was clearly not the right person for the job.
As for the book itself, well the utterly terrible communication made it kind of impossible to comprehend the meaning but from the parts I did manage to pick up, it's not that impressive. Elsewhere on Audible there's a book called "Rationality: from AI to Zombies" which has some of it's own problems, but it's mostly well read and offers a better understanding of rationality than this book does.
Shame about that reader.
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