Table Of ContentI DID IT!THE 43 CHAPTERS1. Document My Life2. Get Out More3. Have Faith4. Understand Myself5. Be Happy6. Be Silly7. Ignite Change8. Reinvent Myself9. Be More Adventurous10. Continue My Education11. Make Music12. Stay Focused13. Enjoy Nature14. Find Inner Peace15. Save the Planet16. Reconnect with Loved Ones17. Cook More18. Read More19. Create20. Make A Difference21. Fix My Finances22. Build Something23. Be A Better Person24. Do Something Daring25. Be More Organized26. Travel More27. Dance More28. Learn New Things29. Finish What I Start30. Be Healthy31. Stop It32. Have a Relationship33. Love My Job34. Start A Family35. Be Famous36. Develop Super Natural Powers37. Be Independent38. Live In the Moment39. Have More Friends40. Get It On41. Compete In A Sport42. Get A Pet43. 100 Things That Make Me Happy (Besides Money)
SynopsisDream It. List It. Do It is the ultimate do-it-yourself guide to self-improvement. Drawing from the true stories and experiences of the 1.5 million registered users of 43things.com, a Webby Award-winning social networking site, Dream It. List It. Do It works on the proven principle that creating a life list, sharing your progress, and checking things off as done gives a person momentum toward a bigger and bolder life. Dream It. List It. Do It offers over 5,000 life-changing ideas drawn from real people and organized in 43 categories--like Travel More, Create, Do Something Daring, Ignite Change, Expand My Education, Save the Earth, Love My Job, Finish What I Start, Be Healthier, Fix My Finances, Live in the Moment. Fundamental to the whole enterprise are the book's Ten Rules for Creating and Conquering a Life List, including #4 Maintain Between 20 and 43 Goals, #7 Make Your List Public, and #9 Document Progress. whether it's playing the piano, learning how to do a handstand, cooking a perfect paella--or something much more central to one's life, like "Be more spontaneous"--just putting a desired goal on your list is like shouting "Yes, I can "", Dream It. List It. Do It! is the ultimate do-it-yourself guide to self-improvement. Drawing from the true stories and experiences of the 1.5 million registered users of 43things.com, a Webby Award-winning social networking site, Dream It. List It. Do It! works on the proven principle that creating a life list, sharing your progress, and checking things off as done gives a person momentum toward a bigger and bolder life. Dream It. List It. Do It! offers over 5,000 life-changing ideas drawn from real people and organized in 43 categories--like Travel More, Create, Do Something Daring, Ignite Change, Expand My Education, Save the Earth, Love My Job, Finish What I Start, Be Healthier, Fix My Finances, Live in the Moment. Fundamental to the whole enterprise are the book's Ten Rules for Creating and Conquering a Life List, including #4 Maintain Between 20 and 43 Goals, #7 Make Your List Public, and #9 Document Progress. whether it's playing the piano, learning how to do a handstand, cooking a perfect paella--or something much more central to one's life, like "Be more spontaneous"--just putting a desired goal on your list is like shouting "Yes, I can!"", In this distinct new introduction to the field, one of the world's most respected and experienced philosophers, Pascal Engel, voices his expert view on the state of the field, including the relationship between our common sense understanding of the mind and its scientific study, the idea that there are distinct levels of explanation and the nature of mental representation. It also attempts to show how philosophy and psychology can be articulated in a variety of cases - the nature of mental representation, of concepts, of perception and action, rationality and the social nature of cognition - leading to a fruitful combination of empirical and conceptual approaches to the mind. This concise yet authoritative volume offers the advanced student or philosopher both an overview of the subject as it is today and a modern interpretation of the field from a respected philosopher. Pascal Engel offers something unique to the reader by examining philosophy of psychology within the context of philosophy of science and philosophy of mind. Furthermore, he invites the reader to explore issues in social psychology and the future of the field.