How Not To Be Wrong: The Art of Changing Your Mind

Paperback Published on: 13/05/2021
Price: £12.99
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Bookseller Reviews

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How Not To Be Wrong
A fascinating but depressing take on the modern world
You probably know James O'Brien from his radio show on LBC or his viral videos in debates with callers where he runs rings around their generally obnoxious... READ MORE
Jimbo James

Synopsis

There's no point having a mind if you're not willing to change it.

In his bestselling How To Be Right, James provided an invigorating guide to how to talk to people with bad opinions. And yet the question he always gets asked is 'If you're so sure about everything, haven't you ever changed your mind?'

In an age of us vs. them, tribal loyalties and bitter divisions, the ability to change our minds may be the most important power we have. In this intimate, personal new book, James's focus shifts from talking to other people to how you talk to yourself about what you really think. Ranging across a dazzling array of big topics, cultural questions and political hot potatoes, James reveals where he has changed his mind, explains what convinced him, and shows why all of us need to kick the tyres of our opinions, check our assumptions and make sure we really think what we think we do.

Coloured with stories of changing minds from the incredible guests on his podcasts and callers to his radio show, and spanning big ideas like press regulation and brexit, through to playful subjects like football and dog-ownership, How Not To Be Wrong is packed with revelations, outrage, conversations and lots of humour.

Because in a world that seems more divided than ever, if you can't change your own mind you'll never really be able to change anyone else's.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Ebury Publishing
  • ISBN: 9780753557716
  • Number of pages: 240
  • Dimensions: 196 x 124 x 20 mm
  • Weight: 200g
  • Languages: English

Customer Reviews

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How Not To Be Wrong
Uncomfortable, honest looks at bias
Holding up a mirror to middle class views and how we have formed bias conscious and unconscious from our family, education and social setting. This is then... READ MORE
Helen Wilkinson
How Not To Be Wrong
Personal, illuminating, brilliant
Holding up a mirror to middle class views and how we have formed bias conscious and unconscious from our family, education and social setting. This is then... READ MORE
Helen Wilkinson
How Not To Be Wrong
A brilliantly honest and refreshing account of one man's journey into a different way of living
This book opens with the line that 'there is no point having a mind if you never change it'. In a world that is increasingly polarised and blind to anyone ... READ MORE
Louise Barber
How Not To Be Wrong
Thoroughly enjoyable read
I was not sure what to expect with this book but found myself pleasantly surprised. James O'Brien details how he has changed his opinions on controversial... READ MORE
Laura Richardson
How Not To Be Wrong
The Art of Changing Our Mind
Over the disaster that has been Brexit I began to listen to James O’Brien, drawn in by his ability to apply common sense to the more bizarre arguments and ... READ MORE
Hayley Baxter
How Not To Be Wrong
James O'Brien, How not to be wrong.
Courageously faces up to problems caused by abuse and upbringing. Brilliantly written.
Lynne Buckingham
How Not To Be Wrong
Recommended Reading
We all have prejudices, predefined ideas, easy solutions to complicated problems. We all know that the world's issues could be solved by some simplistic i... READ MORE
Peter Leeson
How Not To Be Wrong
The perfect antidote for a polarised world.
It’s easy to see the world in a binary way these days. James’s book perfectly spells out the benefits of being able to see both sides of an argument. Inste... READ MORE
Calvin D'Souza
How Not To Be Wrong
Only by accepting you're mistaken can you hope to be right in the future.
My final book of the year was this little number by James O'Brien. Incidentally, the second of his I have read this month. And a nice easy read to end the ... READ MORE
Yonni.I