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Take Pride

Why the Deadliest Sin Holds the Secret to Human Success

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A leading psychologist reveals how our most misunderstood emotion - pride - has shaped our minds and our culture, and shows how we can harness its power.

Why did Paul Gauguin abandon middle-class life to follow the path of a starving artist? What inspired Bill Gates to give away so much of his hard-won fortune? How has Donald Trump succeeded so excessively, when his winning style could easily be his greatest liability?

As the renowned emotion researcher Jessica Tracy reveals in Take Pride, each of these superachievers has been motivated by an often maligned emotion: pride. Its dark, hubristic side is well known, but Tracy shows that pride is also essential for helping us become our best, brightest selves. By making us care about how others see us and how we see ourselves, pride makes us strive for excellence. In the right doses and the right contexts, it has been proven to boost creativity, motivate altruism, and confer status and power on those who display it. In Take Pride, Tracy explains why we came to feel pride and how we can make this double-edged emotion serve us - rather than the other way around.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2016 Jessica Tracy. (P)2016 Brilliance Audio, all rights reserved.
Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Social Psychology & Interactions Emotions
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As a researcher who studies pride, I found this book absolutely comprehensive. I think anyone who is interested to know all the practical aspects of current studies on pride should certainly consider this book.

A practical and insightful review of pride

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I normally love this sort of book, but for some reason I found this one a bit of a challenge. 3/4 of it is a bit like a textbook.

The book gives a good account of pride, it's origins and forms and for the psy student a good example of how the subject is studied. There are some key insights which I genuinely found useful and will apply in my everyday life. I'm glad I read it.

Good concepts, shame it's a of a bit dull read.

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