Getting People to Change is Difficult

Marty Nemko writes in his essay “On the Difficulty of Getting People to Change” in his “How to Do Life” column at Psychology Today: What’s going on? In some cases, the person simply doesn’t have the self-discipline to habituate it. Others claim to have forgotten about it. Others say (rationalize?) that it isn’t important enough […]

Hemingway in Praise of F Scott Fitzgerald

Ernest Hemingway writes in A Moveable Feast, His talent was as natural as the pattern that was made by the dust on a butterfly’s wings. At one time he understood it not more than the butterfly did and he did not know when it was brushed or marred. Later he became conscious of his damaged […]

Vicarious Redemption

Christopher Hitchens writes in Letters to a Young Contrarian, I find something repulsive about the idea of vicarious redemption. I would not throw my numberless sins onto a scapegoat and expect them to pass from me; we rightly sneer at the barbaric societies that practice this unpleasantness in its literal form. There’s no moral value […]

Steve Jobs Difficult to Work with

Ed Catmull, President and CEO of Pixar (now part of Disney) on how working with Steve Jobs was difficult. Pixar could not have survived without Steve, but more than once in those years, I wasn’t sure if we’d survive with him. Steve could be brilliant and inspirational, capable of diving deeply and intelligently into any […]

The Four Disciplines of a Sound Insurance Operation, According to Warren Buffett

From Warren Buffett’s 50th annual shareholder letter for Berkshire Hathaway: At bottom, a sound insurance operation needs to adhere to four disciplines. It must (1) understand all exposures that might cause a policy to incur losses; (2) conservatively assess the likelihood of any exposure actually causing a loss and the probable cost if it does; […]

Mindfulness and Healing

Thich Nhat Hanh in The Path of Emancipation: Talks from a 21-Day Retreat: We have to trust the power of understanding, healing, and loving within us. It is our refuge. It is the Buddha. It is the Kingdom of God existing within us. If we lose our faith and confidence in it, we lose everything. […]

Truth is Only an Instrumental Goal

Regina Rini of the Philosophy Department at York University in Toronto addresses the nature of truth: Most philosophers will tell you that truth is their goal. They want to know the truth about Knowledge or Existence or Justice. I’m sure this is—but I conjecture that ‘truth’ is only an instrumental goal. What these philosophers really […]

A New Relationship to Suffering

Buddhist teacher Elizabeth Mattis-Namgyel wrote in The Power of an Open Question: The Buddha’s Path to Freedom: The unique beauty and kindness of the Buddha’s approach is that it never suggests we need to experience anything other than what we experience. The Buddha never said that some thoughts are bad or wrong and we should […]

Building Trust is All-encompassing

In Trusted Partners: How Companies Build Mutual Trust and Win Together, Jordan D. Lewis writes: Trust is at the heart of today’s knowledge economy. With trust as a foundation, companies or groups within companies can share their know-how to achieve results that exceed the sum of the parts. Unlike formal contracts or rigid hierarchies, trust […]

Giovanni Boccaccio’s Human Comedy

Judith Powers Serafini-Sauli writes in Giovanni Boccaccio, Twayne’s world Authors Series, Boccaccio’s works embrace medieval and classical literature, prose and poetry, epic and lyric, Latin and Italian, popular and “high” culture. He revived the pastoral romance, attempted a modern epic, established the vernacular ottava as the epic stanza in Italian, and then, later in life, […]