"Body Language: How to Read Others Thoughts by Their Gestures" by Allan Pease
Allan Pease: "As a young boy, I was always aware that what people said was not always what they meant or were feeling and that it was..."
Everybody knows someone who can walk into a room full of people and, within minutes, give an accurate description about the relationships and feelings those people are experiencing. This ability to read a person’s attitudes and thoughts by their behaviour was the original communication system used by humans before spoken language evolved.
Cashflow Quadrant: Rich Dad's Guide to Financial Freedom
This is one of the best of the Rich Dad Poor Dad audios. The core idea
in this series is that being an investor or business owner gives one
more freedom and a higher upside than being someone else's employee or
being an owner-operator of a business. With vivid personal stories, the
authors show that many people, including the author's "poor" dad (an
educational administrator), choose working for others because of
insecurity or misguided trust in organizations. One builds true
financial freedom by accumulating assets that make money, especially
rental property. Though others have offered this advice, it's clearer
and more potent here, and worth listening to many times if your
financial insecurity or complacency needs a push.
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Coursebooks | 11 July 2007
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Physics for Dummies
368 pages
Thanks to this book, you don’t have to be Einstein to understand physics. As you read about Newton’s Laws, Kepler’s Laws, Hooke’s Law, Ohm’s Law, and others, you’ll appreciate the For Dummies law: The easier we make it, the faster people understand it and the more they enjoy it!
Statistically Speakingis a book of quotations.
It provides the largest collection of quotations pertaining to probability and statistics yet published (1533 quotations from 633 authors). Some quotes are profound, others are wise, some are witty but none are frivolous. Here you will find quotations from the most famous to the unknown. You will find many of the 'jewels' that exist but please forgive us if we've missed any personal favourites. The extensive author and subject indexes provide you with the perfect tool for locating quotations for practical use or pleasure, and you will soon enjoy discovering what others have said on topics ranging from actuaries to variability. This book will be a handy reference for the scientific reader and the wider public interested in who has said what on statistics.