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The Dance of Life: The Other Dimension of TimeBUY FROM AMAZON.COM
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Usually ships in 24 hours RRP: Buy New: $11.16 You Save: $2.79 (20%) Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours EDITORIAL REVIEWFirst published in 1983, this book studies how people are tied together and yet isolated by hidden threads of rhythm and walls of time. Time is treated as a language, organizer, and message system revealing people's feelings about each other and reflecting differences between cultures. PRODUCT DETAILSPublisher: AnchorPub. Date: 9th February 1984 Catalog: Book Media: Paperback Number Of Pages: 250 Ean: 9780385192484 Isbn: 0385192487 ABOUT THIS BOOKUSER REVIEWS
This book blew my mind back when it was first released, and on third or fourth read, there is still so much information to be gleaned from it. Issues discussed: Appointments by time vs. being late because a friend in need is more important. Queueing for the bus vs. pushing and shoving to the front of the line. Needing closure vs. pigeon-holing a half-completed but unimportant task, often for months or even years. But most importantly, the book goes in great detail into how these cultural differences in the perception of time and sequence affect interactions between the races and between nations. I highly recommend Dance of Life not only for international travellers but also for anyone who has to deal with other cultures.
I am a scientist. how these reviewers in "prestige" journals bother normal researchers with their remarks like "seldom bothers to document" or "has constructed a system and world view which bears little relationship to accepted" and their "qualitatitive musings" of the humanitarian social sciences. Or natural sciences. Then they,perhaps, submit THEIR grants with YOUR ideas however... It is greed, greed of greed and only greed and nothing else as greed. They want more grants, they want more senksual pleasures and excitement. And, more important, THEY DO NOT WANT TO THINK. Only for Money. Like storm-troopers of the Evil Empire. Me do thinks this is a good review of the book. Yours sincerely, Dr Vader.
Hall seldom bothers to document, presents his musings as given, has constructed a system and world view which bears little relationship to accepted qualitatitive research in the social sciences. . . so why read this book? Because every chapter has an idea with unusual parallels either to developments in cognitive research, to human-computer interaction, or to linguistics, all of which came about post-publication! Astounding intuitions, oftentimes annoyingly documented. SIMILAR ITEMS: |

A must-have for understanding cultural perceptions of time.
Irritating Methodology, Extraordinary Insights