12 Rules for Life New York Times Review

2018 cocky-help book by Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson

12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos
12 Rules for Life Front Cover (2018 first edition).jpg

First edition cover

Author Jordan Peterson
Audio read by Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson
Illustrator Ethan Van Sciver
Country Canada
Language English
Subjects
  • Cocky-help
  • psychology
  • philosophy
Publisher Random Firm Canada
Penguin Allen Lane (Great britain)

Publication date

Jan 23, 2018 (Canada)
January xvi, 2018 (Great britain)
Media type Print, digital, aural
Pages 448 (hardcover)
320 (ebook)
ISBN 978-0-345-81602-3 (Canada)
978-0-241-35163-5 (U.k.)

Dewey Decimal

170/.44
LC Class BJ1589 P48 2018
Followed by Beyond Order

12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos is a 2018 self-help book by the Canadian clinical psychologist Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson. Information technology provides life advice through essays in abstract ethical principles, psychology, mythology, religion, and personal anecdotes. The book topped bestseller lists in Canada, the United States, and the Great britain, and has sold over five million copies worldwide.[i] Peterson went on a world bout to promote the book, receiving much attention following an interview with Aqueduct iv News.[2] [three] The book is written in a more attainable manner than his previous academic book, Maps of Significant: The Compages of Belief (1999).[9] A sequel, Across Order: 12 More Rules for Life, was published in March 2021.[10]

Overview [edit]

Background [edit]

Peterson'south interest in writing the book grew out of a personal hobby of answering questions posted on Quora; 1 such question being "What are the about valuable things anybody should know?", to which his respond[11] comprised 42 rules.[5] The early on vision and promotion of the volume aimed to include all rules, with the title "42".[12] [thirteen] Peterson stated that it "isn't only written for other people. It'southward a alert to me."[6]

12 Rules [edit]

The book is divided into chapters with each title representing one of the following twelve specific rules for life equally explained through an essay.

  1. "Stand upwardly straight with your shoulders back."
  2. "Treat yourself like y'all are someone you lot are responsible for helping."
  3. "Make friends with people who want the best for you lot."
  4. "Compare yourself to who you were yesterday, not to who someone else is today."
  5. "Do not let your children do anything that makes yous dislike them."
  6. "Set your house in perfect gild before you criticize the world."
  7. "Pursue what is meaningful (not what is expedient)."
  8. "Tell the truth – or, at to the lowest degree, don't lie."
  9. "Presume that the person you are listening to might know something yous don't."
  10. "Be precise in your spoken communication."
  11. "Do not bother children when they are skateboarding."
  12. "Pet a true cat when you run across one on the street."

Content [edit]

The book's primal idea is that "suffering is built into the structure of being" and although it can exist unbearable, people have a choice either to withdraw, which is a "suicidal gesture," or to face and transcend information technology.[four] Living in a earth of anarchy and guild,[14] anybody has "darkness" that tin "turn them into the monsters they're capable of being" to satisfy their nighttime impulses in the right situations. Scientific experiments like the Invisible Gorilla Test testify that perception is adjusted to aims, and it is ameliorate to seek meaning rather than happiness. Peterson notes:[half dozen]

It'southward all very well to remember the meaning of life is happiness, only what happens when you're unhappy? Happiness is a groovy side effect. When information technology comes, accept information technology gratefully. But it'southward fleeting and unpredictable. It's not something to aim at – because information technology's not an aim. And if happiness is the purpose of life, what happens when yous're unhappy? Then you're a failure.

Illustration of a lobster making a dominance display, which is rewarded neurochemically with the release of serotonin.

Illustration of a lobster making a authorization display, which is rewarded neurochemically with the release of serotonin

The book advances the idea that people are built-in with an instinct for ethics and meaning, and should accept responsibility to search for meaning above their own interests (Rule seven, "Pursue what is meaningful, not what is expedient"). Such thinking is reflected both in contemporary stories such as Pinocchio, The Panthera leo King, and Harry Potter, and in aboriginal stories from the Bible.[6] To "Stand up straight with your shoulders dorsum" (Rule 1) is to "take the terrible responsibleness of life," to brand self-cede,[fifteen] because the individual must ascent in a higher place victimization and "bear his or her life in a manner that requires the rejection of immediate gratification, of natural and perverse desires akin."[14] The comparison to neurological structures and behavior of lobsters is used as a natural example to the germination of social hierarchies.[7] [8] [16]

The other parts of the work explore and criticize the land of young men; the upbringing that ignores sexual practice differences betwixt boys and girls (criticism of over-protection and tabula rasa model in social sciences); male–female interpersonal relationships; schoolhouse shootings; faith and moral nihilism; relativism; and lack of respect for the values that built Western society.[7] [17] [18] [19]

In the terminal chapter, Peterson outlines the means in which one can cope with the nearly tragic events, events that are frequently out of one's command. In it, he describes his ain personal struggle upon discovering that his daughter, Mikhaila, had a rare bone disease.[6] The affiliate is a meditation on how to maintain a watchful eye on, and cherish, life'due south small redeemable qualities (i.e., to "pet a cat when you lot encounter one"). Information technology also outlines a practical fashion to deal with hardship: to shorten ane's temporal scope of responsibility (e.g., focusing on the adjacent minute rather than the adjacent 3 months).[20]

Canadian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Norman Doidge wrote the book's foreword.[6]

Publication [edit]

Marketing [edit]

To promote the book, Peterson went on a world tour, initially from January 14, 2018, to February 17, 2018, including events in England, Canada, and the United States.[21] The sold-out venues included 1,000-seat briefing hall Emmanuel Centre in London,[22] [17] and ii,000-seat Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles.[23] The February xi event at Citadel Theatre in Edmonton was cancelled by the theatre'south board of directors and management, for which they subsequently apologized, and instead was held at a sold-out Hyatt Place.[24] [25] The second office included three sold-out events in March in Australia,[26] continuing at Beacon Theatre in New York, and the third part held betwixt early on May and June initially numbering ten events in the United states of america and Canada and one in the UK.[27] Until June, the bout visited 45 cities in Due north America, Europe and Australia, reaching an audience of over 100,000 people.[28] According to Peterson, nearly 200,000 people attended the live events until late July.[29]

As role of the tour, Peterson had an interview on Aqueduct four News that went viral, receiving considerable attention and over 36 one thousand thousand views on YouTube.[2] [14] [26] [3] He too appeared on BBC Radio 5 Alive and BBC'due south HARDtalk;[30] LBC's Maajid Nawaz radio show; Fox & Friends and Tucker Carlson Tonight;[nineteen] [31] ABC's 7.30;[32] Sky News Australia's Outsiders;[33] HBO's Existent Time with Bill Maher;[34] and The Dr. Oz Testify, among others.[35]

Release [edit]

Penguin Allen Lane published the volume on January 16, 2018, in the Great britain.[36] Random House Canada published it on January 23 in Canada.[37] [38] every bit of September 2018[update], the volume was slated to be translated into 45 languages.[39]

The 12 Rules for Life audiobook was number ane on Audible in Canada, and number iii in the US.[40] In Canada, since its debut, it topped The Globe and Post's and the Toronto Star's nonfiction bestsellers lists.[41] [42] [43] [44] According to CBC Books, it was the 4th-bestselling Canadian volume of the year.[45] According to the Toronto Star, it was the "biggest Canadian book success story of the twelvemonth", topping original nonfiction and Canadian nonfiction categories, with only Canadian poet writer Rupi Kaur having like sales.[46] According to Publishers Weekly, Kobo Inc. reported that it was the 2nd-bestselling audiobook of 2018 in Canada,[47] whereas per BookNet Canada and BNC SalesData the print volume was 3rd and Peterson was the bestselling Canadian writer of the yr.[48]

In the UK the book enjoyed five weeks at the top of The Sunday Times's bestsellers list for general hardcover (Feb xviii - March 25,[49] [fifty] [51] [52] [53] again on April xv),[54] selling over 120,000 copies past September 16.[55] Co-ordinate to The Sunday Times, the hardback edition was the yr's 4th-biggest seller in the "full general hardbacks" category with 153,160 copies sold past cease of the twelvemonth.[56] According to The Guardian, the Nielsen BookScan reported sales of 147,899 copies made it merely the 32nd bestselling book of the year.[57]

Co-ordinate to The Guardian, the Nielsen BookScan reported sales of over 10,000 copies until March 12 in Commonwealth of australia.[58] According to The Irish Times, in Ireland information technology was the 23rd-bestselling book of the twelvemonth with xiv,408 copies.[59]

In the U.s., the volume became the number-one nonfiction book and e-book on The Wall Street Journal 'southward Acknowledged Books listing.[sixty] [61] It also topped The Washington Post'due south[62] [63] and Reuters's US bestsellers listing,[64] reached number two on USA Today 's overall listing,[65] and topped the hardcover nonfiction and top x overall category for Publishers Weekly,[66] [67] [68] selling over 559,000 copies by September 24, 2018.[69] In the category it replaced Michael Wolff's Fire and Fury.[seventy] At the end of the year the hardcover version was the 11th-bestselling book, with 692,238 copies.[71] Penguin Random House CEO Markus Dohle said in late March that the book had already sold over 700,000 copies in the United states of america.[72] The book did not chart on The New York Times, Los Angeles Times and IndieBound bestsellers list. According to Toronto Star books editor Deborah Dundas, the New York Times stated it was non counted considering information technology was published by a Canadian company.[73] According to Random Firm Canada, the book was handled properly for the Usa market place.[40] [74]

Peterson announced the book had sold over two meg copies (August 6, 2018),[75] [76] then 3 1000000 copies (January xiii, 2019),[77] and later on that work had begun on a sequel (January 2019).[78] The volume reached 5 million sales by Nov 2020.[1]

In March 2019, Whitcoulls, one of New Zealand's leading book retailers, temporarily removed the book from their stores and online catalogue, apparently in reaction to the Christchurch mosque shootings. The withdrawal of the book was prompted by social media photos of Peterson posing with a fan wearing a T-shirt proverb "I'1000 a proud Islamophobe." Peterson and his supporters strongly criticized Whitcoulls's decision because Whitcoulls continued to sell Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf and Henry Malone'south Islam Unmasked. The volume was reinstated six days after it was removed.[79] [lxxx] [81] [82]

Reception [edit]

Melanie Reid, in her review of 12 Rules for Life for The Times, says the book is "aimed at teenagers, millennials and young parents." Summarising it, she states: "If yous peel back the verbiage, the cerebral preening, y'all are left with a hardline self-assist transmission of self-reliance, practiced behaviour, self-betterment and individualism that probably reflects [Peterson's] babyhood in rural Canada in the 1960s."[83] Bryan Appleyard, also writing for The Times, describes the book as "a less dense and more practical version of Maps of Meaning." He says it is "a baggy, aggressive, in-your-face, go-existent book that, ultimately, is an attempt to lead united states dorsum to what Peterson sees equally the true, the beautiful and the expert – i.east., God."[84]

Hari Kunzru of The Guardian said the book collates communication from Peterson's clinical practice with personal anecdotes, accounts of his academic work as a psychologist and "a lot of intellectual history of the 'great books' variety", simply the essays on the rules are explained in an overcomplicated style. Kunzru chosen Peterson sincere, just found the book irritating because he considers Peterson to have failed to follow his ain rules.[85] In an interview with Peterson for The Guardian, Tim Lott chosen the book atypical of the self-help genre.[6]

In a joint review with Steven Pinker'southward Enlightenment At present for The Scotsman, Nib Jamieson praised the essays as "richly illustrated and packed with excellent advice on how we can restore pregnant and a sense of progression to our everyday lives", describing both books as "exact waterboarding for supporters of big authorities".[86] The New York Times'due south David Brooks wrote, "The Peterson way is a harsh mode, just it is an idealistic style – and for millions of immature men, information technology turns out to exist the perfect antidote to the cocktail of coddling and accusation in which they are raised".[14]

Joe Humphreys of The Irish gaelic Times argued people shouldn't be stopped "from reading what is a veritable powerhouse of a book: wise, provocative, humorous and also maddeningly contradictory (every bit all deep and truthful studies of human being nature must be)".[87] Glenn Ellmers in Claremont Review of Books wrote that Peterson "does not shrink from telling readers that life means pain and suffering. His deft exposition, nevertheless, makes clear that duty is frequently liberating and responsibleness can exist a souvenir".[28]

Dorothy Cummings McLean, writing for the online magazine The Catholic World Written report, chosen the book "the almost thought-provoking self-help book I have read in years", with its rules reminding her of those by Bernard Lonergan, and content "serving equally a bridge betwixt Christians and non-Christians interested in the truths of human life and in resisting the lies of ideological totalitarianism".[88] In a review for the same magazine, Bishop Robert Barron praised the archetypal reading of the story about Adam and Eve and the Garden of Eden with Jesus representing "gardener" and the psychological exploration of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and The Gulag Archipelago but did not back up its "gnosticizing tendency to read Biblical religion purely psychologically and philosophically and not at all historically" or the idea that "God ... [is] simply a principle or an abstraction". Information technology is "valuable for the beleaguered young men in our society, who demand a mentor to tell them to stand straight and deed like heroes", Barron wrote.[89] Adam A. J. DeVille took a very different view, calling 12 Rules for Life "unbearably banal, superficial, and insidious" and saying "the real danger in this book is its apologia for social Darwinism and bourgeois individualism covered over with a theological patina" and that "in a simply world, this volume would never take been published".[90]

Ron Sprint, in a review for The Ormsby Review, considered the book "an endeavour to articulate a more meaningful order for liberty as an antidote to the erratic ... chaos of our age", merely although "necessary" with exemplary advice for men and women it is "inappreciably a sufficient text for the tougher questions that beset united states on our all too homo journey and should be read as such."[91] [92] In a review for the Financial Times, Julian Baggini wrote, "In headline form, most of his rules are simply timeless good sense.... The problem is that when Peterson fleshes them out, they carry more flab than meat".[93]

In The Spectator, Peter Hitchens wrote that he did not similar the book's "conversational and accessible" style and amount of "recapitulation", but believed it had "moving moments", "expert communication" with a bulletin "aimed at people who accept grown upward in the postal service-Christian West" with special entreatment to young men.[94] Park MacDougald of New York shared a like view, writing that on newspaper Peterson lacks the "coherence, emotional depth" of his lectures merely "still, he produces nuggets of real insight."[7]

Pankaj Mishra's review in The New York Review of Books called 12 Rules a repackaged collection of pieties and tardily 19th-century Jungian mysticism that has been discredited past mod psychology. Mishra compared the book, and Peterson'due south ideas, to historical authors who influenced Peterson, just whose serious moral failings, including racism and fascism, Peterson fails to accost. He criticized Peterson's book for failing to recognize how traditionalism and myth tin be used in support of demagoguery and anti-autonomous ideas, and asserts that Peterson'southward work is a symptom of the issues it attempts to cure.[95] Peterson responded to the review on Twitter, taking umbrage at Mishra'southward description of Peterson'southward friendship with First Nations creative person Charles Joseph as "the latest in a long line of eggheads pretentiously just harmlessly romancing the noble fell"; Peterson wrote in response, "If yous were in my room at the moment, I'd slap you happily."[96] [97] [98]

In a review for Psychology Today, philosopher Paul Thagard called the volume flimsy and said Peterson'south views fail to stand up to philosophical scrutiny. According to Thagard, "If you become for Christian mythology, bigoted individualism, obscure metaphysics, and existentialist angst, then Jordan Peterson is the philosopher for you. Just if you adopt evidence and reason, expect elsewhere."[99] Psychologist John Grohol, writing for PsychCentral, said the book'south basic advice was sound, self-axiomatic, and harmless, but he could non recommend it because Peterson justified his advice with rambling tangential anecdotes and religious dogma instead of scientific data.[100]

In the Los Angeles Review of Books, Guy Stevenson wrote that Peterson's work is widely ignored by serious academics, in function because of his inflated claims targeting a conspiracy of "postmodern neo-Marxists", but that his level of celebrity had not been seen for a public intellectual since Marshall McLuhan in the 1960s. Co-ordinate to Stevenson, Peterson's practical advice and Jungian mysticism reflect a new counterculture movement similar to that of the 1960s. He chosen 12 Rules aggressive and overeager to blame issues on "bogeymen", and recommended as an alternative the piece of work of John Gray, who has addressed some of the aforementioned issues with more than thoughtfulness.[76]

Kelefa Sanneh of The New Yorker noted:

some of his critics might exist surprised to detect much of the communication he offers unobjectionable, if onetime-fashioned: he wants young men to be better fathers, better husbands, better community members. In this manner, he might be seen equally an heir to older gurus of manhood similar Elbert Hubbard, who in 1899 published a stern and wildly pop homily called A Message to Garcia … At times, Peterson emphasizes his interest in empirical knowledge and scientific research—although these tend to be the least convincing parts of 12 Rules for Life.[xix]

David French of National Review called the book a "buoy of light" for the current time, with a unproblematic but profound purpose "to help a person look in the mirror and respect the person he or she sees."[101] Some critics, such as National Review's Heather Wilhelm[102] [103] and Toronto Star's James Grainger, were critical of initial negative reviews that they believed had misinterpreted Peterson.[8]

In September 2018, Peterson threatened to sue Cornell University philosopher Kate Manne for defamation afterwards she called his work misogynistic in an interview with Vox. Manne called Peterson'due south threat an attempt to arctic costless speech. Vox considered the threat baseless and ignored it.[104] [105] [106] In a critique often shared by prominent intellectual Noam Chomsky,[107] Nathan Robinson of Current Affairs called Peterson a "charlatan" who gives "the nigh elementary fatherly life-communication" while adding "convolutions to disguise the simplicity of his mind."[108]

In an commodity published in 2020 in the International Journal of Jungian Studies, "Carl Jung, John Layard and Jordan Peterson: Assessing Theories of Human Social Evolution and Their Implications for Analytical Psychology", Gary Clark offers a sustained critique of Peterson's thought as outlined in 12 Rules for Life.[109] The article asserts that Peterson fails to accept business relationship of inquiry in paleoanthropology, evolutionary anthropology and ethnographic studies of egalitarian societies. Such societies, which are believed to represent the ancient forager adaptation of H. sapiens, are matrilineal and lack social hierarchy. The author argues that a major sociocultural transformation occurred from this aboriginal adaptive complex with the onset of agriculture giving rise to mod patrilineal and hierarchical cultures. This view contrasts with Peterson's, which postulates modern social and economic structures are an outgrowth of the hierarchical impulses of our premammalian, mammalian and primate ancestors. This led the writer to conclude that Peterson seems to take "projected his own cultural biases back into the deep past".[110]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Dr. Jordan B. Peterson Announces the Follow-Upwardly to His Global Bestseller 12 Rules for Life". penguinrandomhouse.com . Retrieved 2021-02-10 .
  2. ^ a b Jordan Peterson debate on the gender pay gap, campus protests and postmodernism on YouTube
  3. ^ a b Doward, Jamie (January 21, 2018). "'Back off', controversial professor urges critics of C4 interviewer". The Observer . Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  4. ^ a b Blatchford, Christie (January 19, 2018). "Christie Blatchford sits down with "warrior for common sense" Jordan Peterson". National Post . Retrieved January nineteen, 2018.
  5. ^ a b Bartlett, Tom (January 17, 2018). "What's So Dangerous Near Jordan Peterson?". The Chronicle of Higher Pedagogy . Retrieved Jan 19, 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d e f k Lott, Tim (January 21, 2018). "Jordan Peterson: 'The pursuit of happiness is a pointless goal'". The Observer . Retrieved Jan 21, 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d MacDougald, Park (February 11, 2018). "Why They Listen to Jordan Peterson". New York . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  8. ^ a b c Grainger, James (January 22, 2018). "Jordan Peterson on embracing your inner lobster in 12 Rules for Life". Toronto Star . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  9. ^ [4] [5] [half-dozen] [7] [viii]
  10. ^ Suzanne Moore, Suzanne Moore (February 27, 2021). "Beyond Order: 12 More than Rules for Life, review: Jordan Peterson is back with a self-assist book that is not here to hug you improve". The Daily Telegraph . Retrieved March ii, 2021.
  11. ^ "Jordan B Peterson's respond to What are the well-nigh valuable things everyone should know? - Quora". www.quora.com . Retrieved 2018-07-22 .
  12. ^ "Jordan Peterson on His New Book". YouTube. The Agenda with Steve Paikin. Archived from the original on 1 February 2013. Retrieved 2021-02-11 .
  13. ^ "The Death of the Oceans (one)". The Death of the Oceans. JordanPetersonVideos. 10 Nov 2014. Outcome occurs at 8:13. Retrieved 2021-02-eleven .
  14. ^ a b c d Brooks, David (Jan 25, 2018). "The Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson Moment". The New York Times . Retrieved January 31, 2018.
  15. ^ Gornoski, David (Jan 29, 2018). "Christ vs. the Crowd: My Interview with Jordan B. Peterson". The Christian Post . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  16. ^ Gonรงalves, Leonor (January 24, 2018). "Psychologist Jordan Peterson says lobsters assistance to explain why man hierarchies exist – practise they?". The Chat . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  17. ^ a b Murray, Douglas (January 20, 2018). "The curious star appeal of Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson". The Spectator . Retrieved January twenty, 2018.
  18. ^ Rubenstein, Adam (March i, 2018). "Jordan Peterson: 'I Don't Want People Falling Downwards in an Ideological Abyss'". The Weekly Standard . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  19. ^ a b c Sanneh, Kelefa (March v, 2018). "Jordan Peterson'southward Gospel of Masculinity". The New Yorker . Retrieved March three, 2018.
  20. ^ Hashemite kingdom of jordan, Peterson (Nov 1, 2017). "Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson LIVE: 12 Rules for Life - An Antitoxin to Chaos". website (Interview). Interviewed past Dave Rubin. Los Angeles, California: The Rubin Report. Retrieved April one, 2018.
  21. ^ "Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson Events". jordanbpeterson.com . Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  22. ^ Law, Katie (January 20, 2018). "Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson: the 'anti-snowflake' crusader speaks out". London Evening Standard . Retrieved January twenty, 2018.
  23. ^ Read, Max (February iv, 2018). "Talking Basement-Dwellers With Jordan Peterson, Reddit's New Favorite Philosopher". New York . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  24. ^ Staples, David (Jan 18, 2018). "David Staples: Dark mean solar day as Citadel Theatre snubs controversial author". Edmonton Journal . Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  25. ^ Heidenreich, Phil (Jan 20, 2018). "Edmonton'southward Citadel Theatre apologizes over how it handled Jordan Peterson event". Global News . Retrieved January 20, 2018.
  26. ^ a b Albrechtsen, Janet (February 24, 2018). "Jordan Peterson: vi reasons that explicate his rise". The Australian . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  27. ^ "Dr. Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson Announces 12 Rules for Life Bout". The New York Times. Feb 20, 2018. Archived from the original on April 3, 2018. Retrieved March v, 2018.
  28. ^ a b Glenn Ellmers (August i, 2018). "The Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson Phenomenon". Vol. XVIII, no. 3. Claremont Review of Books. Retrieved October 24, 2018. Peterson said that nearly 200,000 people have already come to see him "with no danger, and very little controversy."
  29. ^ Pearson, Heide; Pullen, Lauren; Modest, Kaylen (July 25, 2018). "Jordan Peterson responds to open up letter calling for Calgary appearance to be cancelled". Global News. Retrieved October 24, 2018. Peterson said that nearly 200,000 people have already come to encounter him "with no danger, and very little controversy."
  30. ^ "HARDTalk, Jordan Peterson, There is 'a backlash confronting masculinity'". BBC. August 6, 2018. Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  31. ^ "Professor on Trudeau'southward 'Mankind' Objection: Canada Will 'Pay' for This Leftist Credo". Fox News. Feb half-dozen, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  32. ^ Frank Chung (March fourteen, 2018). "Jordan Peterson says hate speech will be policed by 'last people in the world you lot would want to'". news.com.au . Retrieved April 21, 2018.
  33. ^ "Governments should not 'mandate' gender speech". Heaven News Australia . Retrieved April 21, 2018.
  34. ^ "Jordan Peterson Clashes west/ Maher Panel About Political Divide: 'You Need To Take Respect' For Trump Voters". Mediaite. April 21, 2018. Retrieved April 21, 2018.
  35. ^ Tim Hains (April 14, 2018). "Dr. Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson Shares Personality Quiz to Aid You Empathize Yourself, Accomplish Your Goals". RealClearPolitics . Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  36. ^ "12 Rules for Life by Jordan B. Peterson". Penguin. Retrieved March iii, 2018.
  37. ^ "12 Rules for Life by Hashemite kingdom of jordan B. Peterson". Penguin Random House. Retrieved March three, 2018.
  38. ^ Anderson, Porter (Dec 14, 2017). "Rights Roundup: Reports From Sweden, Spain, Deutschland, Greece, Canada, Australia". Publishing Perspectives. Retrieved Oct 22, 2018.
  39. ^ "About Dr. Hashemite kingdom of jordan B Peterson - Clinical Psychologist, Professor, Author". jordanbpeterson.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2018. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  40. ^ a b Hopper, Tristin (March seven, 2018). "Could Jordan Peterson become the best-selling Canadian author of all fourth dimension?". Edmonton Journal . Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  41. ^ "Bestsellers: Hardcover Non-Fiction, Feb. three, 2018". The Globe and Mail . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  42. ^ "Bestsellers: Hardcover Non-Fiction, March three, 2018". The Globe and Mail . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  43. ^ "Toronto Star bestsellers for the week ending Feb. x". Toronto Star . Retrieved March three, 2018.
  44. ^ "Toronto Star bestsellers for the week ending March 10". Toronto Star . Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  45. ^ "The acme 10 bestselling Canadian books of 2018". CBC. December 26, 2018. Retrieved January v, 2019.
  46. ^ Sarah Murdoch (December 26, 2018). "Big bestsellers list: the books yous bought in 2018". Toronto Star . Retrieved January half dozen, 2019.
  47. ^ Ed Nawotka (Dec 12, 2018). "A.J. Finn is Kobo's Bestselling Writer of 2018". Publishers Weekly . Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  48. ^ Ed Nawotka (January 15, 2019). "Canadian Print Book Sales Stayed Flat in 2018". Publishers Weekly . Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  49. ^ "Books: The Sunday Times Bestsellers, Feb xviii". The Sun Times . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  50. ^ "Books: The Sunday Times Bestsellers, February 25". The Sun Times . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  51. ^ "Books: The Dominicus Times Bestsellers, March 4". The Sunday Times . Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  52. ^ "Books: The Sun Times Bestsellers, March 11". The Sunday Times . Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  53. ^ "Books: The Sunday Times Bestsellers, March 25". The Sunday Times . Retrieved March 26, 2018.
  54. ^ "Books: The Dominicus Times Bestsellers, Apr 15". The Dominicus Times . Retrieved May 22, 2018.
  55. ^ "Books: The Sunday Times Bestsellers, September sixteen". The Sunday Times . Retrieved October 22, 2018.
  56. ^ "Books: The Sunday Times Bestsellers of the Year, 2018". The Sunday Times. December 30, 2018. Retrieved Jan 6, 2019.
  57. ^ Dugdale, John (December 29, 2018). "The 100 bestselling books of the year: from Eleanor Oliphant to Michelle Obama". The Guardian . Retrieved Jan 6, 2019.
  58. ^ Hutchens, Gareth (March 12, 2018). "Non all he says is defensible, but Jordan Peterson deserves to be taken seriously". The Guardian . Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  59. ^ Doyle, Martin (December nineteen, 2018). "Ireland'southward bestselling books of 2018 revealed". The Irish Times . Retrieved January six, 2019.
  60. ^ "Best-Selling Books Week Ended Feb. 11". The Wall Street Journal. February sixteen, 2018. Retrieved March ii, 2018.
  61. ^ "Wall Street Journal-All-time Sellers". The Washington Post. April 12, 2018. Retrieved April 17, 2018. [ expressionless link ]
  62. ^ "Bestsellers: National nonfiction". The Washington Post. February eleven, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  63. ^ "Bestsellers: National nonfiction". The Washington Post. February 25, 2018. Retrieved March iii, 2018.
  64. ^ "Table-Hannah'south 'The Great Alone' again tops U.S. best-sellers". Reuters. March ane, 2018. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  65. ^ "12 Rules for Life: An Antitoxin to Anarchy charting". USA Today . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  66. ^ "Publishers Weekly All-time-Sellers". Miami Herald. January eighteen, 2019. Archived from the original on January 19, 2019. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  67. ^ "Publishers Weekly Bestseller Lists – Hardcover Nonfiction". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on March 3, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  68. ^ "Publishers Weekly Bestseller Lists – Top 10 Overall". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on March three, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  69. ^ "Publishers Weekly Bestseller Lists – Hardcover Nonfiction". Publishers Weekly . Retrieved July ix, 2018.
  70. ^ "Rules to alive past from a grumpy old man". Irish Independent. Feb 25, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  71. ^ Jim Milliot (Jan iv, 2019). "'Becoming' Is Top-Selling Title In 2018". Publishers Weekly . Retrieved January 5, 2019.
  72. ^ Jim Milliot (March 27, 2018). "PRH Has Stable 2017". Publishers Weekly . Retrieved Apr 17, 2018.
  73. ^ Dundas, Deborah (February ix, 2018). "Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson's volume is a bestseller – except where information technology matters well-nigh". Toronto Star . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  74. ^ Stelter, Brian (April 16, 2018). "Every peak New York Times best-seller this year has been well-nigh Trump". CNN . Retrieved Apr 17, 2018.
  75. ^ Jordan B Peterson (2018-08-06), August 2018 Patreon Q & A , retrieved 2018-08-07
  76. ^ a b Guy Stevenson (October one, 2018). "Straw Gods: A Cautious Response to Hashemite kingdom of jordan B. Peterson". Los Angeles Review of Books . Retrieved Oct 22, 2018. shifted 2 million books
  77. ^ Jordan B Peterson (2019-01-13), Jan 2019 Q & A , retrieved 2019-01-13
  78. ^ "The Hashemite kingdom of jordan B Peterson Podcast - #61 - January 2019 Q&A". JordanBPeterson.com. 22 Jan 2019. Retrieved xx March 2019.
  79. ^ "Whitcoulls appears to have removed Jordan Peterson's books from auction". Stuff.co.nz. March 22, 2019. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  80. ^ Rutledge, Daniel (22 March 2019). "Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life removed from Whitcoulls following Christchurch terror assail". Newshub. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  81. ^ Crowe, Jack (22 March 2019). "New Zealand Retailer Pulls Jordan Peterson Book afterward Mosque Shootings". National Review . Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  82. ^ Flood, Alison (March 27, 2019). "Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson book returns to New Zealand bookshops after Christchurch attack". The Guardian . Retrieved March 27, 2019.
  83. ^ Reid, Melanie (January 12, 2018). "Review: 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos past Jordan B Peterson". The Times.
  84. ^ Appleyard, Bryan (January 13, 2018). "Book review: 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Anarchy by Jordan B Peterson". The Times.
  85. ^ Kunzru, Kari (January 18, 2018). "12 Rules for Life by Jordan B Peterson review – a cocky-help book from a culture warrior". The Guardian.
  86. ^ Jamieson, Bill (Feb 22, 2018). "Bill Jamieson: I've constitute two antidotes to our cult of unhappiness". The Scotsman . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  87. ^ Humphreys, Joe (April 21, 2018). "The gospel according to Jordan B Peterson". The Irish gaelic Times . Retrieved April 29, 2018.
  88. ^ McLean, Dorothy Cummings (March 4, 2018). "Hashemite kingdom of jordan B. Peterson's "12 Rules for Life" is a call to clarity in an age of chaos". The Cosmic Earth . Retrieved March iv, 2018.
  89. ^ Barron, Robert (February 27, 2018). "The Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson Phenomenon". The Catholic Earth . Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  90. ^ DeVille, Adam A. J. (3 April 2018). "Jordan Peterson's Jungian best-seller is bland, superficial, and insidious – Catholic Globe Report". www.catholicworldreport.com . Retrieved three June 2018.
  91. ^ Todd, Douglas (March 3, 2018). "Review of one of the virtually pop books e'er by a Canadian". The Vancouver Dominicus . Retrieved March iii, 2018.
  92. ^ Sprint, Ron (February 23, 2018). "The stupid man's smart person". The Ormsby Review. No. 251. Archived from the original on March 8, 2018. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  93. ^ Baggini, Julian (January 19, 2018). "12 Rules for Life by Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson – back to basics". Financial Times.
  94. ^ Hitchens, Peter (February 10, 2018). "Jordan Peterson doesn't become nearly far enough". The Spectator . Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  95. ^ Mishra, Pankaj (March 19, 2018). "Jordan Peterson & Fascist Mysticism". The New York Review of Books . Retrieved Apr 29, 2018.
  96. ^ Heer, Jeet. "Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peterson joins the lodge of macho writers who take thrown a fit over a bad review". New Commonwealth . Retrieved April 29, 2018.
  97. ^ Fox, Clara (April 20, 2018). "The Rush to Condemn Jordan Peterson every bit Racist". National Review . Retrieved Apr 29, 2018.
  98. ^ Varney, James (March 26, 2018). "Jordan Peterson'due south refusal to kowtow to modern liberal pieties makes him a star — and a marked human being". The Washington Times . Retrieved Apr 29, 2018.
  99. ^ Thagard, Paul (February fourteen, 2018). "Jordan Peterson's Flimsy Philosophy of Life: Peterson's claims about morality, reality, and the meaning of life are dubious". Psychology Today . Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  100. ^ Grohol, John G. (25 September 2018). "Volume Review: 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Anarchy – Psych Central". PsychCentral. Archived from the original on 30 Oct 2018. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  101. ^ French, David A. (March one, 2018). "A Volume for Our Times". National Review . Retrieved Apr 17, 2018.
  102. ^ Wilhelm, Heather (January 26, 2018). "The Last Gasps of Outrage Civilisation?". National Review . Retrieved March three, 2018.
  103. ^ Wilhelm, Heather (January 29, 2018). "Commentary: The terminal gasps of America'southward outrage culture". Chicago Tribune . Retrieved March three, 2018.
  104. ^ Carmon, Irin. "Exclusive: Jordan Peterson Threatened to Sue Author for Calling Him a Misogynist". The Cut . Retrieved 2018-09-21 .
  105. ^ Ensor, Jamie (22 September 2018). "Professor Jordan Peterson threatens to sue after critic calls him misogynist". Newshub . Retrieved 1 November 2018.
  106. ^ Illing, Sean (6 June 2008). "A feminist philosopher makes the example confronting Jordan Peterson". Vox . Retrieved 1 November 2018.
  107. ^ Robinson, Nathan (24 June 2019). "A Conversation With Chomsky". Current Affairs . Retrieved 2 September 2019.
  108. ^ Robinson, Nathan (fourteen March 2018). "The Intellectual We Deserve". Electric current Affairs . Retrieved 2 September 2019.
  109. ^ Clark, Gary. ′Carl Jung, John Layard and Jordan Peterson: Assessing Theories of Man Social Evolution and Their Implications for Belittling Psychology.' International Journal of Jungian Studies 12 (2020) 129–158.
  110. ^ Clark, Gary. ′Carl Jung, John Layard and Jordan Peterson Assessing Theories of Human Social Evolution and Their Implications for Belittling Psychology.′ International Journal of Jungian Studies 12 (2020) p. 136.

External links [edit]

  • 12 Rules for Life – Peterson'due south website
  • 12 Rules for Life – Penguin United Kingdom
  • 12 Rules for Life – Penguin Random House Canada
  • 12 Rules For Life by Jordan B. Peterson: An Excerpt – Penguin Random Firm Republic of india

weirchither.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12_Rules_for_Life

0 Response to "12 Rules for Life New York Times Review"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel