If Writers are Necessarily Right... (Non-Kairos references)
[Parts: First | All] [Links: To-K | From-K | From-Kx ]
Allison, James. The Joy of Being Wrong: original sin through Easter eyes. Crossroad, 1998. [
excerpt]
Arbesman, Samuel. The Half-life of Facts: why everything we know has an expiration date. Current, 2012.
Asimov, Isaac. The Relativity of Wrong: essays on science. Doubleday, 1988. [
text]
Black, Donald. The Social Structure of Right and Wrong. Academic Press, 2014.
Burton, Robert A. On Being Certain: believing you are right even when you're not.St Martin's Griffin, 2009.
Chabris, Christopher /
Simons, Daniel J. The Invisible Gorilla: and other ways our intuition deceives us. HarperCollins, 2010. [
excerpts]
Davis, Pryce R. /
Horn, Michael S. /
Sherin, Bruce L. The Right Kind of Wrong: a "knowledge in pieces" approach to science learning in museums.
Curator: The Museum Journal, 56, 2013, 1, pp. 31-46. [
abstract]
Dawkins, Richard. The God Delusion. Bantam Books, 2006.
de Bono, Edward. I Am Right, You Are Wrong: From This to the New Renaissance: From Rock Logic to Water Logic. Penguin Books, 1992.
de Bono, Edward. New Thinking for the New Millennium. New Millennium Entertainment, 1999.
Ehrenreich, Barbara. Smile or Die: how positive thinking fooled America and the World. Granta Books, 2010.
Friedman, Thomas L. The World Is Flat; the globalized world in the twenty-first century. Penguin, 2006.
Friedman, Thomas L. Hot, Flat, and Crowded: why we need a green revolution. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008.
Friedman, Thomas L. The World Is Flat: a brief history of the twenty-first century. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005 [
review]. [
review]
Galbraith, James K. The End of Normal: the great crisis and the future of growth. Simon and Schuster, 2014.
Gilovich, Thomas. How We Know What Isn't So: the fallibility of human reason in everyday life. Free Press, 1993.
Hallinan, Joseph T. Why We Make Mistakes: how we look without seeing, forget things in seconds and are all pretty sure we are way above average. Broadway Books, 2010.
Haupt, R. The Relativity of Right and Wrong [Ethically Speaking].
Antennas and Propagation Magazine, IEEE, 49, 2007, 1, pp. 204.
Huff, William S. Homonym, Homonym and Homonym and Other Word Pairs.
Symmetry: Culture and Science, vol 3, 1 (Paper to the Second Symposium of the International Study of Symmetry, Hiroshima, 1992).
Kirkpatrick, Jeane. The Myth of Moral Equivalence.
Imprimis, January 1986.
Longenecker, Dwight. The Joy of Being Wrong.
National Catholic Register, 18 February 2015. [
text]
Moore, C. J. In Other Words. Walker, 2004.
Mushakoji, Kinhide. Global Issues and Interparadigmatic Dialogue; essays on multipolar politics. Torino, Albert Meynier, 1988.
Peck, James. Ideal Illusions: how the U.S. Government co-opted human rights. Macmillan, 2011.
Pomeroy, Steven Ross. The Key to Science (and Life) Is Being Wrong.
Scientific American, 13 November 2012. [
text]
Popova, Maria. 5 Must-Read Books on the Psychology of Being Wrong.
Brain Pickings, 4 April 2011. [
text]
Rheingold, Howard. They Have a Word For It: a lighthearted lexicon of untranslatable words and phrases. Jeremy Tarche, 1988.
Satell, Greg. Sometimes Being Wrong Can Be More Valuable Than Being Right.
Forbes, 14 November 2011. [
text]
Schulz, Kathryn. The Bright Side of Wrong.
The Boston Globe, 13 June 2010. [
text]
Schulz, Kathryn. Being Wrong: adventures in the margin of error. Ecco / HarperCollins, 2010. [
excerpts]
Schulz, Kathryn. On Learning To Love 'Being Wrong'.
NPR, 7 June 2010. [
text]
Shukman, Henry. The Art of Being Wrong: why being wrong can be the best thing that ever happened to us.
Tricycle, Spring 2013. [
text]
Tavris, Carol /
Aronson, Elliot. Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me): why we justify foolish beliefs, bad decisions and hurtful acts. Mariner Books, 2008.
Tugend, Alina. Better By Mistake: the unexpected benefits of being wrong. Riverhead, 2011. [
review]