• Hacking Life: Unraveling Self-Control and Task Management

  • 2024/10/22
  • 再生時間: 26 分
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Hacking Life: Unraveling Self-Control and Task Management

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    The book consists of eight chapters. The first seven chapters are: Life Hackers, Time Hackers, Motivation Hackers, Material Hackers, Health Hackers, Relationship Hackers, and Meaning Hackers.

    The author examines the group of life hackers from perspectives such as life processes, time management, behavioral motivation, material management, physical health, interpersonal relationships, and obtaining meaning.

    In this episode, we will analyze from the underlying logic of life hackers. In fact, the two issues that all life hackers strive to address are self-control and task management, which will be emphatically interpreted for you in the first two parts. In the third part, we will restore a part of the book that the author considers very important but is often overlooked by readers. That is, as a communication scholar, Regal's rational reflection and criticism of "life hackers".

    The author of the book, Joseph M. Reagle, Jr., is an associate professor of communication at Northeastern University in the United States. He is the author of "Good Faith Collaboration: The Culture of Wikipedia" and "Reading the Comments: Likers, Haters, and Manipulators at the Bottom of the Web".

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The book consists of eight chapters. The first seven chapters are: Life Hackers, Time Hackers, Motivation Hackers, Material Hackers, Health Hackers, Relationship Hackers, and Meaning Hackers.

The author examines the group of life hackers from perspectives such as life processes, time management, behavioral motivation, material management, physical health, interpersonal relationships, and obtaining meaning.

In this episode, we will analyze from the underlying logic of life hackers. In fact, the two issues that all life hackers strive to address are self-control and task management, which will be emphatically interpreted for you in the first two parts. In the third part, we will restore a part of the book that the author considers very important but is often overlooked by readers. That is, as a communication scholar, Regal's rational reflection and criticism of "life hackers".

The author of the book, Joseph M. Reagle, Jr., is an associate professor of communication at Northeastern University in the United States. He is the author of "Good Faith Collaboration: The Culture of Wikipedia" and "Reading the Comments: Likers, Haters, and Manipulators at the Bottom of the Web".

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