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Every Brain Needs Music by Lawrence Sherman & Dennis Plies The Neuroscience of Making and Listening to Music

What's it about? Every Brain Needs Music (2023) combines neuroscience research with music pedagogy to reveal how brains and music work together. The work demonstrates how musical activities activate the nervous system's cognitive, sensory, and motor functions while reshaping neural architecture. What happens inside your brain when you hear music? More than you might think. Listening activates sensory, motor, emotional, and cognitive networks simultaneously. Creating music from scratch requires complex collaboration between imagination, planning, and memory. And practicing an instrument rewires neural pathways, and changes the relationship between body and mind. Musical performance integrates all these systems under pressure, coordinating sensation, movement, and emotion in real time. Each mode of musical engagement leaves lasting changes in brain structure and connectivity. This lesson dives deep into how music shapes human neurology into a symphony of extraordinary abi...

The Origins of Victory by Andrew F. Krepinevich How Disruptive Military Innovation Seals the Fate of Nations

What's it about? The Origins of Victory (2023) explores how military organizations use disruptive innovation to gain decisive advantages during revolutionary shifts in warfare. By analyzing historical case studies – the development of carrier task forces, precision-guided munitions, and more – it identifies the common characteristics of militaries that successfully spot and exploit the next big thing. When you picture the future of global conflict, your mind might drift toward familiar images: massive armies, heavy steel tanks, sheer physical force. But the reality taking shape right now looks very different – it’s quieter, faster, and far more complex. We’re standing at the edge of a major shift where the most decisive battles will be fought with invisible algorithms, orbital space networks, and autonomous swarms before a single boot touches the ground. In this lesson, you’ll see the hidden mechanics behind how monumental shifts in power actually happen. You’ll trace the bluep...

What to Do If... ? by Anne-maartje Oud 35 Questions You'll Need to Answer at Work

What's it about? What to Do If…? (2026) is a hands-on playbook for the messy, human side of modern work. It shows you how to read behaviour in real time, communicate without confusion, give feedback people can actually use, and hire in a way that doesn’t come back to bite you. Through simple tools and recognisable scenarios, it equips managers, HR professionals, and team members to handle tricky moments with clarity instead of guesswork. Work would be simple if it were just tasks. But it’s not – it’s people. A colleague starts crying mid-feedback. A “perfect” hire turns into a team bully. A quick deadline check spirals into tension. These moments happen everywhere and most people are left to improvise. So they do. The manager goes with their gut. The HR partner hopes for the best. The team lead smooths things over instead of addressing the issue. Sometimes it works. But often it creates confusion, erodes trust, or plants problems that resurface later when they’re bigger and har...

Football by Chuck Klosterman An all-American ritual

What's it about? Football (2026) asks how a sport that looks slow, brutal, and occasionally baffling became America’s most irresistible obsession. Unpacking the strange magic behind the pauses, the hits, and the rituals, it shows us how football shapes a nation’s identity, attention, and the stories it tells itself about winning, losing, and belonging. Every Sunday, millions of Americans fall into a familiar routine. The TV comes on, the day rearranges itself around kickoff, and suddenly a third down matters more than anything else was on the to-do list. Text threads light up. Plans get postponed. Hours vanish. The ordinariness of the ritual hides its extraordinary scale. In 2023, 93 of the 100 most watched programs in the United States were NFL games. That’s more than popularity. That’s cultural infrastructure. Football is entertainment, habit, and social glue all at once. It shapes weekends, drives advertising, fuels fantasy leagues and betting apps, and gives cow...

I Need a Job! by Gary Burnison Be Noticed. Land the Interview. Get Hired.

What's it about? I Need a Job! (2025) addresses the reality of modern job searching, where simply updating and distributing your resume no longer works. It outlines a comprehensive strategy for success in today’s competitive hiring environment, balancing practical tools with timeless principles centered on authenticity, targeted networking, and genuine human connection. It equips you with actionable guidance – from understanding yourself to mastering interviews – so you can stand out and land the opportunity you want. Gary Burnison was lying in a hospital gown, still groggy from anesthesia, when an anesthesiologist wheeled him toward recovery. To his surprise, in that captive moment, the doctor held up a two-page resume right in front of his face. Burnison had mentioned Korn Ferry, the executive search and recruitment firm, during the pre-op procedure, and now, the anesthesiologist seized his chance to network. It’s a funny story, but it points to something serious: many profess...

Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant A groundbreaking and influential philosophy classic about the limits of human reason

What's it about? The Critique of Pure Reason (1781) is one of the most groundbreaking, revolutionary, and influential books in the history of Western philosophy. Pointing out the limits of human reason, it argues that we can have knowledge about the world as we experience it, but we can never know anything about the ultimate nature of reality. What is the nature of space and time? Is the world governed by the law of cause and effect – and if so, why? These are just two of the fascinating questions that Kant raises in the Critique of Pure Reason. His answers are thought-provoking, revolutionary, and even downright mind-blowing. Unfortunately, they’re also buried in 856 pages of some of the most impenetrable prose ever written. Kant himself described it as “dry, obscure, opposed to all ordinary notions, and moreover long-winded. ” Even Kant scholars are unsure of how to understand the Critique’s incredibly complicated arguments, and they’ve put forward many competing interpretation...