Dacher Keltner is a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, and the faculty director of the Greater Good Science Center. A renowned expert in the science of human emotion and consultant to Pixar's Inside Out, Dr Keltner studies compassion and awe, as well as issues of power, status, inequality and social class. He is the author of The Power Paradox and the bestselling Born to Be Good, and the co-editor of The Compassionate Instinct.
Fascinating and enjoyable
*Sunday Times*
Keltner writes movingly... Awe often defies language, but Keltner
is highly attuned to its traces
*Guardian*
Keltner's core message, imploring us to smell the coffee and whoa
at it, is a welcome one in our overscheduled times
*Financial Times*
Humanity has a lot of loss to work through. Keltner has written the
perfect guidebook for this journey, interweaving discoveries that
he and his disciples have made since he pioneered the scientific
study of awe 20 years ago with highly personal-and at times
excruciatingly tender-meditations on the death of his brother
Rolf
*Harvard Business Review*
A gifted storyteller, Keltner draws on the experiences of
individuals across the world to document the salutary impact of
everyday, wild and mystical encounters with nature, music, visual
art, literature, religion, the birth of children, and the death of
loved ones
*Psychology Today*
Awe is awesome in both senses: a superb analysis of an emotion that
is strongly felt but poorly understood, with a showcase of examples
that remind us of what is worthy of our awe
*Steven Pinker*
I recommend [Awe] to everyone. Its ideas organized a lot of my
experiences, observations, thoughts, and hopes in a powerful new
way
*(X)*
It is rare for a book to dive into a single emotion to analyze it
from every possible angle. Dacher Keltner's expertise makes it a
fascinating and stimulating journey to recognize awe as a
mysterious force in our lives
*Frans de Waal*
An engaging and insightful exploration of the ordinary magic that
connects us to the world, to each other, and to the meanings of our
lives. The 'science of wow' has finally arrived
*Daniel Gilbert*
Your goosebumps when you listen to Beethoven; your wonder as you
behold the Grand Canyon; your amazement at the sheer perfection of
a baby's tiny foot. You've probably sensed that such moments of awe
are some of the most profound experiences ever to happen to you.
But if you've ever wondered where these moments come from, what
they mean, and how to experience them more often: there is no
better guide than Dacher Keltner, the great and wise Berkeley
psychologist. Read this book to connect with your highest self
*Susan Cain*
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