EUR 16,24
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New.
EUR 18,04
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New.
Da: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
EUR 13,05
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000.
Da: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
EUR 16,18
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000.
Da: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Regno Unito
EUR 12,50
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Delivered from our UK warehouse in 4 to 14 business days. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000.
Da: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
EUR 18,24
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000.
Da: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Regno Unito
EUR 15,71
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Delivered from our UK warehouse in 4 to 14 business days. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000.
Da: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Regno Unito
EUR 17,25
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Delivered from our UK warehouse in 4 to 14 business days. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000.
Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
EUR 16,12
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Why does America feel so reactive, exhausted, and divided? Why do institutions seem incapable of reform? Why does the culture feel increasingly unreal? The American Mirror argues that the root cause is national blindness-the loss of America's ability to see itself clearly. Reid P. Claxton, Ph.D., traces the five-part arc of this collapse: the blinding of the interior world, the compensations that fill the vacuum, the systems that sustain the blindness, the new gods that rise in the absence of sight, and the reckoning that determines the nation's future. With diagnostic clarity and narrative force, he shows how Americans drifted into overstimulation, emotional outsourcing, symbolic inflation, and identity fragmentation-and what must be rebuilt for clarity and control to return. In many ways, The American Mirror stands as the natural successor to Claxton's earlier work The Fractured Mind of a Nation. While that book exposed how manufactured realities distort democratic perception, The American Mirror reveals what happens when a country can no longer recognize those distortions as distortions. Together, the two works form a unified diagnostic of national self-deception-one tracing the construction of America's fractured inner world, the other confronting the consequences of living inside it. Readers who found Fractured Mind clarifying will see this book as its deeper, more urgent reflection. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
EUR 19,12
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Everything in modern life seems to malfunction - except the systems that take your money. Why? In The World's Only Perfect Machine - Contacts You Every Month, Reid P. Claxton, Ph.D., exposes the hidden architecture behind the frustration, confusion, and exhaustion that define life in twenty-first-century America. We live inside institutions that forget your needs but never your obligations. They lose your paperwork but never your fine. They can't process a request, but they can process a charge. The parts of society meant to help you are crumbling, while the parts designed to extract from you operate with flawless precision.Drawing on decades of sociological research, Claxton reveals a truth most people feel but rarely articulate: the system isn't broken - it's working exactly as designed. Extraction is optimized. Service is neglected. Confusion becomes a business model. Bureaucratic opacity becomes a shield. Automation accelerates the parts of institutional life that benefit the institution, not the individual. And ordinary people are left carrying the emotional, financial, and logistical burden of structural failure.Through vivid vignettes, sharp contrasts, and deeply integrated sociological principles, Claxton shows how modern institutions behave less like public servants and more like self-protecting organisms. They remember what benefits them and forget what benefits you. They shift risk downward, offloading responsibilities once held collectively onto individuals who are already overwhelmed. They present themselves as moral actors while functioning like narcissistic entities, demanding attention, data, compliance, and payment - while offering less and less in return.This book dismantles the myth that personal disorganization, laziness, or incompetence explains why everything feels harder than it should. Instead, Claxton demonstrates how the architecture of modern life is engineered to keep individuals behind, confused, and isolated. By tracing the rise of thin institutions, the collapse of shared risk, and the triumph of automated extraction, he gives readers the language and clarity to finally understand what they have been living through.But The World's Only Perfect Machine is not a book of despair. It is a book of recognition - and then of agency. Claxton shows how ordinary people can reduce friction, rebuild forms of community that institutions can't provide, and reclaim a sense of control in a world that profits from their overwhelm. He offers practical strategies for navigating systems that will not change, while illuminating the small-scale, human-scale structures that still work because they remain accountable to real people.If you've ever wondered why you can't get a straight answer from a help desk, why every portal you use is broken except the billing page, why every year feels more administratively heavy than the last, or why you blame yourself for problems you didn't create, this book will finally give you the explanation - and the relief - you've been searching for.You were never meant to keep up with the machine. But once you see it clearly, you can stop blaming yourself and start navigating the world with new power, new understanding, and a renewed sense of possibility. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
EUR 20,90
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Infinity Stares Back: Humanity Strangles on Its Own Limits is a sweeping, unflinching examination of what it means to be human in a world too complex for the human mind. Reid P. Claxton, Ph.D., brings together cognitive science, systems theory, evolutionary psychology, and cosmic perspective to illuminate a species caught in a paradox: capable of extraordinary self-awareness yet unable to transcend the architecture that evolution built. The book traces the arc of human understanding across eighteen chapters, each blending narrative vignette, analytical insight, and philosophical clarity. Claxton explores why modern systems exceed human cognitive capacity, why wisdom cannot scale, why civilizations foresee collapse yet cannot prevent it, and why the universe remains silent no matter how loudly humanity projects meaning onto it. He examines the burden of awareness, the collapse of illusions, the desire for surcease, and the fragile sparks of hope that persist even when the species recognizes its own limits.At the heart of the book is a simple, austere truth: the universe does not judge, does not guide, and does not care. Humanity is not central to anything except itself. And yet, within this vast indifference, the species continues-carrying a small light through an infinite void, not because it is destined or chosen, but because continuation is what life does.Claxton's voice is quiet, incisive, and humane. He does not offer solutions or salvation. Instead, he offers perspective-an unadorned view of the species as it is, stripped of myth and narrative. The result is a work that is both sobering and strangely stabilizing, inviting readers to see clearly and continue anyway. Infinity Stares Back is a book for those who seek truth without ornament, clarity without comfort, and meaning without illusion. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.