About the Author
JOHN PERRY is an internationally recognized philosopher and a professor emeritus at Stanford, where he taught philosophy from 1974 to 2008. In 2011, he won the Ig Nobel Prize in literature for the essay on which this book is based. (The Ig Nobels honor achievements in science “that first make people laugh and then make people think.”) He is also the co-host of the public radio show Philosophy Talk, which is broadcast regularly on more than 50 stations in 20 states. The father of three grown children, he lives with his wife in Palo Alto, CA
This is not a book for Bill Gates. Or Hillary Clinton, or Steven Spielberg. Clearly they have no trouble getting stuff done. For the great majority of us, though, what a comfort to discover that we’re not wastrels and slackers, but doers . . . in our own way. It may sound counterintuitive, but according to philosopher John Perry, you can accomplish a lot by putting things off. He calls it “structured procrastination”:
In 1995, while not working on some project I should have been working on, I began to feel rotten about myself. But then I noticed something. On the whole, I had a reputation as a person who got a lot done and made a reasonable contribution. . . . A paradox. Rather than getting to work on my important projects, I began to think about this conundrum. I realized that
I was what I call a structured procrastinator: a person who gets a lot done by not doing other things.
Celebrating a nearly universal character flaw, The Art of Procrastination is a wise, charming, compulsively readable book—really, a tongue-in-cheek argument of ideas. Perry offers ingenious strategies, like the defensive to-do list (“1. Learn Chinese . . .”) and task triage. He discusses the double-edged relationship between the computer and procrastination—on the one hand, it allows the procrastinator to fire off a letter or paper at the last possible minute; on the other, it’s a dangerous time suck (Perry counters this by never surfing until he’s already hungry for lunch). Or what may be procrastination’s greatest gift: the chance to accomplish surprising, wonderful things by not sticking to a rigid schedule. For example, Perry wrote this book by avoiding the work he was supposed to be doing—grading papers and evaluating dissertation ideas. How lucky for us.
首先,当你打开这本书之前,卤煮希望你确定一件事,那就是你并不是抱着“我要治好我的拖延症”的心态去看的。关于拖延症的书有很多种,其中可以分为两类,一类是让你治疗的,譬如如果你已经点开了这篇书评你一定已经很熟悉的《拖延心理学》,另一种便是让你放弃治疗的,譬如这...
评分首先,当你打开这本书之前,卤煮希望你确定一件事,那就是你并不是抱着“我要治好我的拖延症”的心态去看的。关于拖延症的书有很多种,其中可以分为两类,一类是让你治疗的,譬如如果你已经点开了这篇书评你一定已经很熟悉的《拖延心理学》,另一种便是让你放弃治疗的,譬如这...
评分刚读完约翰•佩里的《拖拉一点也无妨》,拖延到现在都没有睡的我觉得有必要来写一篇读后感。 正如作者在后记里说的,写这本书的目的不是让拖延症患者改掉拖延症,而是让他们感觉好一点儿,当然包括他自己。 作者就是一位重度拖延症,流露于字里行间的拖延症气息让同为拖延...
评分后天能做的事儿,就别赶着明天做了。真没想到马克·吐温也能说出这种话。看来作者的“结构化拖延法”的概括真的是很准确也很具有代表性。 结构化拖延者有很多共同通病,稍微总结一下有以下几种: 1. 会自欺欺人,自我安慰。 2. 是完美主义者 有时一件事没有...
评分读完了《拖拉一点也无妨》,我立刻把欠泽阳的活快要干完了(还差1%,明天交货),因为看了书就得用吧?其实这本书说的还是列清单法,但和我以前所列的清单有所不同,把“不要做啥啥啥”也列进去,这样的提醒还是有效的。书的内容不算太多(我读的电子版),读起来没有压力,战...
:)
评分最大的好处是内容够短
评分i really read this book to avoid doing other high priority things on my to-do list. LOL. feeling much better as a typical structured procrastinator...
评分没有时间的同学可以只看前三章
评分超级治愈!If you want to stop procrastinating, it may be because you realize that procrastinating is making you unhappy. Perhaps you should go directly to the project of being happy and let procrastination take care of itself. If you want to know what happiness is, you need to go to the philosophers.
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