Cover Image: Self-Intelligence

Self-Intelligence

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Member Reviews

Self-Intelligence is a interesting book that gives useful information in a easy to understand format. Well written and we'll researched.

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Jane did an amazing job of showing the reader how to get motivated, dialed in and on the track to being able to live a full and functional life. The reader is engaged and equipped with tools to learn and grow their self-intelligence and benefit from reading.

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A great book. A concentrated knowledge and scientific research about the brain and how you can use this knowledge to improve different areas of your life. It is simple and easily understood read and the presentation is clear and interesting.
I really liked that you don't have to read the chapters in order but according to your interest.

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Well-balanced approach to self-improvement, incorporating understandable science to back up claims. Quiz questions in each chapter to test comprehension promote memory. Definitely recommended.

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For the first couple of chapters, I thought nothing of this book. It seemed pompous and lacking any real ways of change. But as I continued reading, Jane Ransom gave some useful information as well as a way to take that information and how to apply it to your life. By the time I reached the end, I was glad that I had read it.

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Although I already knew a lot of the facts and strategies mentioned in this book, it was still interesting to read about them again. Repetition is never wrong, when you are trying to change your behavioural patterns, as Ransom also states several times, maybe not in these exact words though.

The book emphasises that it is never to late to learn something new or to change a pattern and that, due to the brain's plasticity, it is not as hard as one might think to change one's patterns.

Ransom says that her book is a toolbox rather than a how-to to be read from back to front. And although I read it from back to front, I can see that some people might just pick the chapters that most interest them.

Drawing from her experience as a hypnotherapist and from her own life, Ransom created this toolbox based on the Principle of Five. The five main parts of the book are about the subconscious self, the conscious, the embodied, the social and the striving self. Each chapter is introduced with a small quiz, and is concluded by the solution to the quiz and a "In a Nutshell" paragraph. The structure of the book and each chapter is very organic and it is easy to follow Ransom's logic.

I especially liked the logical layout of the book and Ransom's writing style, which incorporates stories and facts in a good mix so that the information is presented in an interesting and easy to understand way.

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This book is an interesting look at the brain and how we can make it work better for us. Using scientific methods and common sense this book twists through ideas to improve your brain function including humorous cartoons and quiz’s to help you pick up and understand the chapters.

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