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How to Do Things with Words by J. L. Austin The Harvard University Lectures that Turned Language into Action

What's it about? How to Do Things with Words (1962) starts from a simple insight with far-reaching consequences: speaking is a way of acting in the world. It shows us how promises, apologies, and declarations quietly shape social reality every day. This is the kind of mind-expanding work that just might change your relationship with language. Most of us move through the day talking without giving language much thought. We make promises, issue warnings, offer apologies, and settle disagreements, all with a few well-chosen words. But J. L. Austin wanted to be clearer about what exactly happens when we speak. He wanted to break free from some of the old philosophical understandings that tied language and statements to being strictly about exchanging ideas and information. As the title suggests, How to Do Things with Words shows how words are more than that – they’re woven into action, authority, and social life. This is an unusual book in that it is made up of 12 lectures that the ...

The Seismic Shift in You by Michelle Johnston Seven Necessary Shifts to Create Connection and Drive Results

What's it about? The Seismic Shift in You (2025) offers a fresh take on leadership that starts from the inside out, with personal growth, self-awareness, and real human connection. It walks you through practical shifts in how you understand yourself and how you relate to others, helping you build confidence, strengthen relationships, and show up as a more grounded and effective leader. You can spend your whole day jumping between messages, emails, video calls, and chat threads and still feel oddly alone at work. Plenty of people move through the week on autopilot, racing from meeting to meeting, answering messages late at night, and wondering why everything feels busy rather than meaningful. Teams work together online yet slowly drift apart. Leaders set goals and deadlines, but engagement slips away all the same. You might notice it in small moments. The meeting where no one speaks up. The project discussion that feels flat instead of energizing. The colleague who’s present on s...

Intentional by Chris Bailey How to Finish What You Start

What's it about? Intentional (2025) reveals how to achieve your ambitions by aligning your daily actions with what truly matters to you. Drawing on a decade of productivity research and insights from Buddhist philosophy, this guide offers practical strategies for structuring goals, overcoming procrastination, and knowing when to let go of pursuits that don’t serve you. Discover how to transform productivity from a struggle into something that flows naturally from your deepest values. You know the pattern all too well: bursting with motivation when setting a new goal, making solid progress for weeks or even months, and then…nothing. The goal just dissolves. Running shoes collecting dust. The half-finished novel. All the resolutions that didn’t make it past February. The problem is that most of us haven’t learned to be truly intentional. This lesson unpacks the fascinating science of goal attainment, revealing why certain ambitions feel natural while others become constant struggl...

Why Plato Matters Now by Angie Hobbs Ancient philosophy for modern life

What's it about? Why Plato Matters Now (2025) explores the work of the ancient Greek philosopher Plato. It shows that, from conversational skills to romantic relationships, there’s still a lot we can learn from the thinker, potentially improving not only our own lives, but society as a whole. Think about the last argument you witnessed – at a family dinner, perhaps, or playing out endlessly on the news. Everyone was talking, no one was listening, and the goal seemed less about understanding than about winning. Moments like these can leave us wondering whether social harmony is still possible. But this is nothing new. More than 2,000 years ago, Plato was grappling with a world that felt just as unstable and polarized as our own. Living through war, plague, political extremism, and the death sentence of his teacher Socrates, Plato asked questions that still feel urgent. How should we live? What makes a society healthy? And how can people with deeply different views speak to one ...

Why We Drink Too Much by Charles Knowles The Impact of Alcohol on Our Bodies and Culture

What's it about? Why We Drink Too Much (2025) reveals why some people can drink socially while others spiral into dependence. It explores how alcohol hijacks ancient survival circuits in the brain, traces the spectrum from casual consumption through grey area reliance to full dependence, and explains why the answer lies in genetics and life experiences rather than weak willpower. It offers 12 science-backed principles for anyone ready to change their relationship with alcohol, from initial abstinence through to lasting sobriety. Before we begin, please be advised that this lesson contains details that some people might find distressing. If you or someone you know needs support, please reach out to a trusted friend or healthcare professional. Ever wondered why some people can enjoy a glass of wine with dinner while others can’t stop at one? Charles Knowles certainly did – especially one afternoon nearly a decade ago when he sat on a Florida deck with a bottle of Bacardi and a han...

The Manager's Path by Camille Fournier A Guide for Tech Leaders Navigating Growth and Change

What's it about? The Manager’s Path (2017) serves as a practical career guide for technology professionals transitioning from individual contributor roles to management positions, from mentoring and tech lead positions all the way to senior executive leadership. It addresses the unique challenges of tech, where management itself is a technical discipline, providing actionable advice and frameworks for handling the obstacles that arise at each stage of a manager’s development. You’ve been coding for years, solving complex technical problems, and suddenly someone asks you to mentor a new hire. Or maybe you’re already a manager, buried under the weight of one-on-ones, performance reviews, and the nagging sense that you’re making it all up as you go. The truth is, most engineers stumble into management with zero training, expected to figure out on their own how to turn individual contributors into high-performing teams while somehow staying technical enough to earn respect. The path...

Assumption-Based Planning by James A. Dewar A Tool for Reducing Avoidable Surprises

What's it about? Assumption-Based Planning (2002) offers a different way to think about strategy. Instead of trying to predict what the future holds, it gives you a method for finding the weak points in any plan – the silent beliefs that, if they turn out to be wrong, bring everything down. You'll walk away with practical tools for stress-testing your goals and making them sturdy enough to survive surprise. All of us want certainty. So, when we plan, we often draw a line from where we are now to where we want to be, and we fill that line with milestones that feel solid and real. There’s comfort in picturing the finished project after all – the thriving business, the goal achieved. But somewhere in the back of your mind, there’s usually a flicker of unease. A quiet awareness that spreadsheets don't account for chaos. The confidence we feel might just be a story we tell ourselves to avoid staring into the unknown. This lesson will strip away that story. You’ll look beneath...