BEST PSYCHOLOGICAL BOOKS FOR BEGGINNERS

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THE BEST PSYCHOLOGICAL BOOKS FOR BEGGINERS

Throughout the ages , psychology is a great subject and one of the vast area of people’s interest as it belongs to all of us and discovering the process leads to a kind of self awareness or self entity rediscovering like trend .

If you are interested to know something about psychological topics and trends , then never hesitate . Always each one can not afford the academic degree . But habit of self reading may lead to a great part of knowledge . This self reading can be on any topic like history , economics , physics and even psychology .

Option of self study is really vast , interesting and effective and highly self mental satisfaction . In case of Psychological study , you have lot options before you to start . But you need to be a bit of selective one . Reading psychological books , realizing them from own perspective and match up them with the causality of ongoing happenings , people’s attachment , your personal Option and reactions to the situations – is a great journey .

Basically , when you feel the natural   interest to know about the psychology , then you may be a bit of conflicted about your should be starting point as the subject is vast enough with numberless branches and real life case studies . So you can always start as per your own area of interest . Thousands of book are waiting for you .

Here I try to focus on some very special books , suggested by the world famous researchers and review makers of top trending psychological books .


To find the best one for you personally, you should stop and think a bit deeply . Just relax  and ask yourself  a couple of questions. The first question you should ask yourself if  you like  to uncover the hidden top trending in your own entity , and others, personalities, is this one: What type of field I want to start exploring?  Then what type of discipline should be  better at to start ?

Psychology is vast subject with numberless areas  of human brain and activities , those are highly inter connected with our social and personal  economy , history , culture , family background and many more areas . Yes, I was amazed, myself, when I first started reading about human behavior but it soon became apparent to me that it’s not only about how we behave. There is behavioral psychology. Cognitive psychology (CBT). Evolutionary psychology. Even the secret society of dark psychology. (Check out a list of the best dark psychology books.)

But when you are a new comer to this area , like to know and rediscover your own world with own perspective , then you should be a bit of careful as you are going to explore a newer world around you .

The 10 Best Psychology Books For Beginners:

·         1. The Psychology Book by Nigel C. Benson

·         2. How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie

·         3. The Emotional Brain by Joseph E. LeDoux

·         4. The Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt

·         5. Stumbling on Happiness by Daniel Todd Gilbert

·         6. The Confidence Game by Maria Konnikova

·         7. Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

·         8. The Path to Purpose by William Damon

·         9. How Children Fail John Holt

·         10. The Invisible Gorilla by Christopher Chabris

1. The Psychology Book by Nigel C. Benson





What’s the book about?

If you’re a total beginner in the field of psychology, a newbie. It could be the  best to start with this book as  It’s a combination of more than 100 ideas in the field of – yes! you guessed it – psychology. The book covers a lot of ground. How it all started – the history of psychology. The most recognized names, ideas, and fundamental concepts around behaviorism, psychotherapy, and developmental psychology. In a very simple way ,  this is an easy-to-get encyclopedia of the fascinating field of psychology. It’s also excellent for children who are taking their first steps into their teenage years.

Who is it for?

Anyone , who likes to makes a step  in the field of psychology. The pictures and the nicely designed pages will break it down for you. You’ll understand the most interesting bits and pieces in the area of psychology. Expect: lots of big ideas simply explained and backed with a lot of images, so you can familiarize yourself with all major concepts.

2. How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie





What’s the book about?

One of the most praised books in the self-help industry. Dale Carnegie teaches us how to win friends by focusing on a couple of simple techniques. The most overlooked technique to get others to like you and join your side? Listen to them. Really listen. This is a bestseller for a simple reason. The stories and the methods are timeless. The book is easy to understand and easy to implement. And lastly, what Carnegie teaches us about influencing is not to force others to do stuff they don’t like. It’s about acknowledging their personalities and desires and finding the optimal solution for both of the parties.

you that you’ll see positive changes in your relationships with others once you obey the commands of Dale Carnegie.

3. The Emotional Brain by Joseph E. LeDoux






What’s the book about?

Our brains are full of complex systems. And while you surely don’t need to know everything, you definitely need to understand this part: our emotions govern our actions. This book will explain, in a relatively easy-to-understand way, what is the so-called “emotional brain” and why you need to care about it. Once you introduce yourself to the emotions your brain produces, you’ll better understand yourself and finally stop reacting with strong annoyance, displeasure, or hostility when the situation doesn’t require it.

 

 

4. The Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt





What’s the book about?

We are happier when we are surrounded by friends and family members, but we’re still restlessly pursuing career success and more money. Where this leads us? To more misery and more suffering. By sharing great stories and by making connections between religion, ancient philosophy, and psychology, the author wants to help us move away from pain and get closer to pleasure.

 

5. Stumbling on Happiness by Daniel Todd Gilbert




What’s the book about?

We are consistently wrong about many things. Our memory is terrible. We tend to misremember how we felt in the past. And we are terrible at predicting what type of activities or things will make us feel joy in the future. This book aims to explain why we are awfully unimpressive at knowing what is going to make us satisfied in the long term. Daniel Todd Gilbert will bombard you with plenty of questions that will allow you to define what happiness means for you.

 

6. The Confidence Game by Maria Konnikova



What’s the book about?

A mesmerizing book that looks at how con artists are able to persuade millions of people. Why Ponzi schemes work and why we are still failing into “obvious” scams. Maria Konnikova explores the secret world of charlatans. What mind games they play on us and most importantly, why we continue to label “too good to be true” stories as legitimate.

7. Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi




What’s the book about?

The famous author, with you’ll-never-say-his-name-right, introduces the concept of “optimal experience.” This book explains in length what types of tasks can unlock true happiness. How you can concentrate better, improve the quality of your work and enter the magical space of flow – a place where you are 100% focused on the current task. This book is heavily mentioned by all productivity experts for a good reason. Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience teaches us exactly what the title entails – diving “in the zone” when you do certain things.

8. The Path to Purpose by William Damon





What’s the book about?

Commonly prescribed for parents, this book can surely help everyone who is struggling to find a sense of purpose in his life. William Damon investigates why so many young people these days are unable to find a career path that seems worthy. Why inspiration is usually a missing ingredient in the life of most teenagers, and why these same youngsters seemingly can’t figure out what they should do with their lives.

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9. How Children Fail John Holt




What’s the book about?

A scientific approach to how children learn – or more precisely, how they do not learn. John Holt focuses on providing us with gimmick-free lessons on how teachers should teach children. Instead of forcing knowledge through clever teaching methods. He provides insightful information about how students naturally learn new information. This allows us to tailor our approach, which leads to better communication between teachers and children.

10. The Invisible Gorilla by Christopher Chabris





What’s the book about?

The Invisible Gorilla is one of the best psychology beginner books for a simple reason: the hidden gorilla experiment demonstrating our inattentional blindness is heavily cited in other famous books. The title explains in an accessible language why and how our eyes can fool us. What type of information remains hidden for the mind to see. And, what are our biases we usually don’t see in the way our brains cope with the world.

Some Closing Thoughts

The field of psychology is an important academic discipline. Yet, few people understand how crucial what glass-wearing knowledge workers who study the mind can teach us.

Regardless of your age, you need to take some time to study how we are designed to operate. What type of mistakes we tend to make and how we can adjust our behavior.

The recommendations above are what I can label good psychology books to read for beginners. I’ve intentionally picked easy-to-read titles. Such that are absent of complicated terms and impossible to get concepts.

After all, if you are new to the field of psychology, you’d want to start with something light. Don’t hope to get everything. Focus on understanding the basics. I can assure you that the more you learn about how we behave, the more you’ll want to learn. Once you figure out the essentials, move on to some more complicated reads – my list of psychology must-reads.

 

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1 Comments

Satyajit Ghosh said…
I like "Flow" by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi.