THE NOBODY MANIFESTO & YOU

by Lawrence Zumo,MD


Formats

Softcover
$12.95
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$12.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 9/30/2013

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 70
ISBN : 9781491820780
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 70
ISBN : 9781491820773

About the Book

Proper decision making is a requirement of a fruitful, fulfilled daily existence and societal advancement. Strategic economic decision making and its implementation separates successful peoples and nations from others-hence the current pyramidal distribution of wealth and other key economic and health indicators amongst the nations of the world. This book attempts to describe a subset of the population in different countries under varied circumstances and relate their decisions to their location on the economic decision ladder. Salient examples are given about this subset viz a viz their thought processes, interactions and ultimately the outcomes and the why and how these outcomes can be explained logically, although it might seem counterintuitive at times. This certainly is not meant to be an explain-it-all, rather a hopeful contribution to that discourse.


About the Author

A neuroscience experimenter and educator with decades of real world data collection experience as well as first and second hand knowledge of the psychosocial and neurologic underpinnings of strategic and not-so-strategic economic decision making processess in a variety of national and international settings across the globe. Observations in open and closed market/transaction places have left an indelible mark on the author as each situation came with its own unique set of circumstances and variables- which in the grand scheme of things have added very rich flavors to the kaleidoscope of the human experience. All this have helped forged a better understanding of why people make the varied and at times counterintuitive decisions that are often made. The author weaves into this discourse experiences from travels to nearly twenty countries in four continents spanning more than three decades.