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The art of procrastination

a guide to effective dawdling, lollygagging, and postponing
Verfasser*in: Suche nach Verfasser*in Perry, John
Verfasser*innenangabe: John Perry
Jahr: 2012
Verlag: New York, Workman
Mediengruppe: Buch
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Vorbestellen Zweigstelle: 07., Urban-Loritz-Pl. 2a Standorte: PI.YP Perr / College 3f - Englisch / Regal 3f-2 Status: Entliehen Frist: 11.05.2024 Vorbestellungen: 0

Inhalt

This is not a book for Bill Gates. Or Hillary Clinton, or Steven Spielberg. Clearly they have no trouble getting stuff done. For the great majority of us, though, what a comfort to discover that we’re not wastrels and slackers, but doers . . . in our own way. It may sound counterintuitive, but according to philosopher John Perry, you can accomplish a lot by putting things off. He calls it “structured procrastination”:
 
 
 
In 1995, while not working on some project I should have been working on, I began to feel rotten about myself. But then I noticed something. On the whole, I had a reputation as a person who got a lot done and made a reasonable contribution. . . . A paradox. Rather than getting to work on my important projects, I began to think about this conundrum. I realized that.
I was what I call a structured procrastinator: a person who gets a lot done by not doing other things.
 
 
Celebrating a nearly universal character flaw, The Art of Procrastination is a wise, charming, compulsively readable book—really, a tongue-in-cheek argument of ideas. Perry offers ingenious strategies, like the defensive to-do list (“1. Learn Chinese . . .”) and task triage. He discusses the double-edged relationship between the computer and procrastination—on the one hand, it allows the procrastinator to fire off a letter or paper at the last possible minute; on the other, it’s a dangerous time suck (Perry counters this by never surfing until he’s already hungry for lunch). Or what may be procrastination’s greatest gift: the chance to accomplish surprising, wonderful things by not sticking to a rigid schedule. For example, Perry wrote this book by avoiding the work he was supposed to be doing—grading papers and evaluating dissertation ideas. How lucky for us. (Verlagstext)

Details

Verfasser*in: Suche nach Verfasser*in Perry, John
Verfasser*innenangabe: John Perry
Jahr: 2012
Verlag: New York, Workman
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Systematik: Suche nach dieser Systematik PI.YP, FS.E
Interessenkreis: Suche nach diesem Interessenskreis Englisch [Sprache]
ISBN: 978-0-7611-7167-6
2. ISBN: 0-7611-7167-3
Beschreibung: 92 S. : Ill.
Schlagwörter: Gelassenheit, Prokrastination <Psychologie>, Aufschieben, Aufschiebeverhalten, Erledigungsblockade, Hinausschieben, Prokrastinieren
Suche nach dieser Beteiligten Person
Sprache: Englisch
Fußnote: Text engl.
Mediengruppe: Buch