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Changing Minds: The Art and Science of Changing Our Own and Other People's Minds
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Changing Minds: The Art and Science of Changing Our Own and Other People's Minds


List price:$26.95
Our price:$17.79 that is 34% off!
Media:Hardcover
Author:Howard Gardner
Publisher:Harvard Business School Press
Release date:01 March, 2004
Average user rating: Average user rating: 5
User rating: 5More than one intelligence
I've seen Howard Gardner speak and he really taught me a lot about there being more than IQ to success in life. He is famous for his work with multiple intelligences which considers the impact of emotional intelligence. I bought Changing Minds with the recommended title "The Emotional Intelligence Quickbook" and it was a great combo. Good recommendation Amazon!
User rating: 5Seven Levers to Influence Decision-Making
One key to success is the ability to influence people's thinking. Whether one is attempting to introduce a major organizational change or convince consumers to switch brands, the ability to change people minds is an important business process.

Howard Gardner, a Harvard psychologist who specializes in cognitive theory, offers us insight into what happens when one changes his or her mind. In order to change someone's mind, Gardner writes, one has to produce a shift in that person's perceptions, codes and the way he or she retains and accesses information.

There are seven levers to change, he says.

1.Reason.
2.Research
3.Resonance
4.Re-descriptions
5.Rewards
6.Real World Events
7.Resistances.

Gardner explores how these levers are employed in six realms.

1.Diverse Groups - such as a nation.
2.Homogeneous Groups - corporations, universities.
3.Culture - Changes effected by art, science or scholarship.
4.Classroom
5.Intimate Gatherings - one-on-one meetings, family gathering.
6.Changes within one's mind.

This book is enlightening and compelling. It offers insights into the methods one can employ to influence others and oneself.

User rating: 5The Art and Science of Deep and Pervasive Mental Surgery
Although many of Gardner's core concepts were first introduced and developed in earlier works, notably in Multiple Intelligences and Frames of Mind (1993) and then Intelligence Reframed (2000), he breaks important new ground when examining the process by which we can change others' minds (assumptions, premises, mindsets, convictions, opinions, etc.) and, of even greater importance, how we can change our own minds wherein resistance to such change can be especially formidable. This is precisely what Jim O'Toole has in mind when discussing "the ideology of comfort and the tyranny of custom" in his brilliant book Leading Change. As Gardner advocates, "One can -- and must -- go through an exercise of deep and pervasive mental surgery with respect to every entrenched view: Define it, understand the reasons for its provenance, point out its weaknesses, and then develop multiple ways of undermining that view and bolstering a more constructive one. In other words, [in italics] search for the resonance and [also in italics] stamp out the resistance." It seems to me imperative that we never underestimate the nature and extent of resistance which results from "the ideology of comfort and the tyranny of custom"

Gardner identifies seven factors ("sometimes I'll call them levers"), most or all of which may influence a mind change: research (relevant data), resonance (the affective component), redescriptions (mutually reinforcing images of what will result from the change), resources and rewards (perceived cost-benefit relationship), real world events (wars, hurricanes, terrorist attacks, depressions, etc.), and resistances (motivation stimulated by opposition). When we attempt to change our own minds or others' minds, or when they attempt to change theirs or ours, the process of persuasion usually involves concepts, stories, theories, and skills. How we (or others) use logic and/or evidence, for example, is determined by our (or their) age, intelligence, education and training, and experience. Young children who fully understand various fables and fairy tales will probably not understand concepts of gravity, democracy, photosynthesis, and pride. How parents attempt to convince their children to take proper care of their toys is obviously quite different from how the same parents attempt to persuade each other when disagreeing about financial issues. Gardner asserts (and I agree) that over time, people become more resistant to change. Set in their ways, determined to protect their "comfort" and "custom."

From my own perspective, entrenched views tend to fall within one of three categories: Those which remain unchanged by any of the seven factors (or levers), those which are improved (i.e. made "more constructive") by it, and finally, those beyond remediation. Moreover, all entrenched views (like nuggets of cheese) have an unsettling tendency to move around -- or be relocated -- by external forces. Therefore, presumably Gardner agrees with me that what he calls the process of "deep and pervasive mental surgery" should be continuous. Unless and until we understand how and why to change our own minds, it is possible but unlikely that we will be able to change anyone else's.

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