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The Secrets of Life series is written for everyone who, frankly,
needs a spot of cheering up, and will provide conversation starters
for years after reading! O'Connor's easy-going, conversational
style brings an outsider's questioning eye to the great forces
behind life. The third in the four-part series explains how game
theory developed, and why it came to show us not only how humans
arrive at their decisions, but why so much of the apparently
bizarre behaviour of the natural world has the same mathematical
logic to it. Instead of the confusion and chaos one might expect in
life, O'Connor shows that there are profound reasons behind the
choices organisms make when they interact, and how we humans
refined this process through the addition of our intelligence and
language skills. Starting with the mind-blowing new ways of
thinking that Adam Smith opened the world's eyes to, the book
progresses to the 20th century-and shows how there's a coherent
rationale behind our thought processes-and how this was gradually
revealed by scientists at a time when the very future of the world
was at stake. As O'Connor unfolds the story in Why Do We All Behave
In The Way We Do?, it becomes ever clearer how cooperation has
evolved to be the critical force at every level of life. It was
what built our world, and it would settle so deeply into the
hardwiring of living things that it would eventually become
instinctive and innate in us. Perhaps most pleasingly, game theory
explains how the benefits of collaboration are bound to ratchet
upwards-and how this will inevitably lead to ever-increasing levels
of moral behaviour in our societies. It is so often an accepted
fact that bad people will win. And yet, as Book Three so clearly
explains, collaborative societies are bound to grow, that it's
rational to forgive to overcome vendettas and feuds, and that nice
folks will always win in life by coming second. Example questions
posed (and answered) in Book Three - Why Do All We Behave In The
Way We Do? What's Game Theory - and why is it so critical to
understanding how to make the right decisions? Why, if humans are
so convinced that most of us are bad, are we concerned about being
fair in our lives? Why do we value trust so highly? What are the
reasons for our surprising wish to care for each other? Why do we
share things, even though we might not have to? How did a failed
robbery explain human nature? Why can it be rational to be
irrational? And why is life like a poker game?
The Secrets of Life series is written for everyone who, frankly,
needs a spot of cheering up, and will provide conversation starters
for years after reading! O'Connor's easy- going, conversational
style brings an outsider's questioning eye to the great forces
behind life. The first book in the four-part series contends that
if we set received wisdom to one side and really dig into the
facts, there are actually very few 'secrets' in life. Instead,
suggesting it's possible to see that from the split second of Big
Bang, right up to our present attempts to make the world a better
place, everything that's alive has been trying to find strategies
to survive the iron Laws of Thermodynamics, to work together to
make more from less, and to overcome the constant threat of
destructive, entropic forces. How Did Life End Up With Us? delves
into explanations as to the reasons behind why cooperation is the
strongest force in life, and why altruism is the proof for the
'gene-based theory of evolution'. O'Connor reveals that from the
point that life first sparked off some 3.8 billion years ago, every
living thing has descended from the original cell by taking blind
mutational and genetic 'decisions'. Through The Secrets of Life
series, aimed at general readers like himself, O'Connor recognises
that life may appear as an endless and violent conflict, yet under
the obvious requirement to take one another's energy, there's
always been a deeper current that's driving living things to higher
and higher levels of cooperation. In other words, the future isn't
quite as bleak as you may believe! Example questions posed (and
answered) in Book One - How Did Life End Up With Us? Why are
mutations like a gambling scam? And why, if DNA is just a bunch of
chemical elements, does it behave like a sophisticated hedge fund
manager? If DNA is so brilliant at replicating things, then why
does the reproduction process make so many mistakes? Why does
everything have to die? How were the Beatles witnesses to one of
the great scientific breakthroughs? Is natural selection enough to
explain evolution?
The Secrets of Life series is written for everyone who, frankly,
needs a spot of cheering up, and will provide conversation starters
for years after reading! O'Connor's easy-going, conversational
style brings an outsider's questioning eye to the great forces
behind life. The second book in the four-part series debates the
steps that led to us being so completely different to anything that
had ever appeared before. If we really were just another kind of
animal off the production line of life, then what were the
revolutions that turbo-charged our abilities? How is it possible
that we only arrived a fluttering of an eyelash ago compared to
evolutionary time, yet we are now so completely dominant over
everything else in life? Book Two also sets out to answer the
questions around what we did that meant we could alter ourselves in
an instant, and so avoid being stuck in an evolutionary niche like
every other organism. Why, for example, was it such a huge step
forward when we began to run? Why was the taming of fire arguably
the most important thing we ever did? How did we manage to create
the intelligence and insights that allowed us to make our own life
decisions? Why was gossiping so critical? With the same writing
approach that typified Book One, in How Did We Get To Be So
Different? O'Connor sets out to answer these and other questions by
summarising the views of the great biologists, anthropologists, and
revolutionary theorists - and then adding some opinions of his
own.. Example questions posed (and answered) in Book Two - How Did
We Get To Be So Different? If we have a degree of control over our
lives, then why were our rulers always so horrible- and why did we
put up with them? Why do we copy each other so much, and yet we'd
accept that others could be so unbelievably violent? How did fire
make us so different? Where did the free will come from that let us
override the drives of our animal pasts - something that no other
organism had ever managed before in the long history of evolution?
How did we develop language? Why was gossip so critical? How did
printing and reading completely change our world?
The Secrets of Life series is written for everyone who, frankly,
needs a spot of cheering up, and will provide conversation starters
for years after reading! O'Connor's easy-going, conversational
style brings an outsider's questioning eye to the great forces
behind life. The final in the four-part series shows what the
theories, research and science all add up to. It examines the
evidence that illustrates how wrong most people in thinking the
world is descending into darkness and chaos, and shows instead that
it's actually improving at an astonishing rate. This explains, the
author says, why in spite of the constant challenges our world
faces, the human race is actually improving by the day, rather than
becoming worse. Book Four points out that many people say that
humans are the ultimate triumph for the selfish gene, yet we've now
developed to the point where we can choose to overrule so many of
its instructions. As the facts about the world's population, its
life expectancies, birth rates, poverty, food security, violence,
natural disasters, energy, climate and all the other major
indicators are laid out in So What Does It All Mean?, it becomes
ever clearer that the
resultsofourevolutionshouldgiveusreasonsforoptimism,notdespair. The
Secrets of Life series concludes by showing us why we are often
wrong in
ourviewofeachother,whywe'rebecomingeverhappierandmoremoral,andwhy
we're so frequently mistaken in our views about the future. Yes, it
concludes, life does have a meaning, it does have an arc of
evolution, non- zero cooperation is what makes things win... and
that includes us humans. Example questions posed (and answered) in
Book 4 - So What Does It All Mean? What are the problems that arise
from our free will? Why are we capable of so much selfishness and
cynicism - and yet also such sympathy, empathy, compassion, and
sacrifice? How have we come to realise that self-interest is quite
different from selfishness? Why have we become so driven by the
need for fairness and trust in our societies - and how can less
control over a society lead to people behaving better? What's the
problem that life is solving? Are we becoming happier? Is violence
reducing or increasing?
Sean O'Connor's lovers, other stories, and words is one of the most
important philosophical works of the 21st century, the first phase
of a philosophy he is ever creating, developing, and cultivating; a
process "surpassing absolutism to a point of an ever expanding
universe of unlimited possibility and complete interconnectivity."
Via solely connecting words, "the way people throughout history
have connected stars and drawn constellations," he constructs a way
of thinking that creates and describes values, making a resource
and a blessing of everything he perceives and considers. Written
and published before the philosopher was 24, O'Connor has planted
the seeds for a lifetime worth of thought to create and share.
Accompanied by a fascinating, amusing, and at times, quite erotic
collection of short stories, this book shines in the midst of the
cynicism, economic struggle, and materialism which desensitized the
postmodern era in which it was written.
Marianne Foyster, Harry Price and the most haunted house in England
- the perfect read for Halloween.  ‘Borley Rectory is
perhaps the definition of an old haunt, still exerting an
extraordinary grip on the popular imagination… Balanced,
surprising and strangely moving’ Mark Gatiss  In
1928, Eric and Mabel Smith took over a lonely parish on the
northern border of Essex. When they moved into Borley Rectory, Mrs
Smith made a gruesome discovery in a cupboard: a human skull. Soon
the house was electric with ghosts. Within the year, the Smiths had
abandoned it and the Rectory became notorious as the ‘most
haunted house in England’. When Reverend Lionel Foyster moved in
he experienced a further explosion of poltergeist activity with an
increasing violence directed at his attractive young wife. Marianne
was a passionate and sensuous woman isolated in a village haunted
by ancient superstition and deep-rooted prejudice. She would be
accused not only of faking the ghosts but of adultery, bigamy –
and even murder. The haunting, sensationally reported in the
tabloid press, gripped the nation. It was investigated by Harry
Price, a self-made ‘psychic detective’. This was the case that
would make Price’s name as the most celebrated ghost-hunter of
the age. He recorded the evidence of 200 witnesses to over 2,000
supernatural incidents. This surely confirmed that not only did
ghosts exist but, finally, here was proof of life after death.
 With the tension of a thriller and the uncanny chills of a
classic English ghost story, Sean O’Connor brings the story of
Borley Rectory to vivid life as an allegory for an age fraught with
anxiety, haunted by the shadow of the Great War and terrified of
the apocalypse to come.
Marianne Foyster, Harry Price and the most haunted house in England
- the perfect read for Halloween. 'Borley Rectory is perhaps the
definition of an old haunt, still exerting an extraordinary grip on
the popular imagination... Balanced, surprising and strangely
moving' Mark Gatiss In 1928, Eric and Mabel Smith took over a
lonely parish on the northern border of Essex. When they moved into
Borley Rectory, Mrs Smith made a gruesome discovery in a cupboard:
a human skull. Soon the house was electric with ghosts. Within the
year, the Smiths had abandoned it and the Rectory became notorious
as the 'most haunted house in England'. When Reverend Lionel
Foyster moved in he experienced a further explosion of poltergeist
activity with an increasing violence directed at his attractive
young wife. Marianne was a passionate and sensuous woman isolated
in a village haunted by ancient superstition and deep-rooted
prejudice. She would be accused not only of faking the ghosts but
of adultery, bigamy - and even murder. The haunting, sensationally
reported in the tabloid press, gripped the nation. It was
investigated by Harry Price, a self-made 'psychic detective'. This
was the case that would make Price's name as the most celebrated
ghost-hunter of the age. He recorded the evidence of 200 witnesses
to over 2,000 supernatural incidents. This surely confirmed that
not only did ghosts exist but, finally, here was proof of life
after death. With the tension of a thriller and the uncanny chills
of a classic English ghost story, Sean O'Connor brings the story of
Borley Rectory to vivid life as an allegory for an age fraught with
anxiety, haunted by the shadow of the Great War and terrified of
the apocalypse to come.
Handsome Brute explores the facts of a once-renowned, now
little-remembered British murder case, the killings of the
charming, but deadly ex-RAF playboy Neville Heath. Since the 1940s,
Heath has generally been dismissed as a sadistic sex-killer - the
preserve of sensational Murder Anthologies - and little else. But
the story behind the tabloid headlines reveals itself to be complex
and ambiguous, provoking unsettling questions that echo across the
decades to the present day. For the first time, with access to
previously restricted files from the Home Office and Metropolitan
Police, this book explores the complex motivations behind the
murders through the prism of the immediate post-war period. Against
the backdrop of a society in flux, a culture at a moment of change,
how much is Heath's case symptomatic, or indeed, emblematic of the
age he lived in? Handsome Brute is both an examination of the age
of austerity, and a real-life thriller as shocking and provocative
as American Psycho or The KillerInside Me, exploring the
perspectives of the women in Heath's life - his wife, his mother,
his lovers - and his victims. This collage of experiences from the
women who knew him intimately probes the schism at the heart of his
fascinating, chilling personality.
The Middle East is one of the fastest growing and significant
markets in world sport, as well as a powerful source of investment
in sport. Bids for the Olympics in 2020 and the soccer World Cup in
2022, as well as remarkable investments in Formula One motor
racing, horse racing and English Premier League soccer clubs,
demonstrate the strength of interest, the depth of resource and the
technical expertise maintained by sport business interests in the
region. Sport Management in the Middle East is the first book to
offer a serious and in-depth analysis of the business and
management of sport in the region. Written by a team of world
leading researchers in Middle Eastern sport, and illustrated in
full colour throughout, the book examines the importance of sport
in the Middle East and introduces its particular management
processes, structures and cultures. As well as providing an
overview of the region's sporting strategy and key stakeholders,
the book also offers a number of detailed case-studies of sport in
individual Middle Eastern countries. A unique guide to sport
management in a region of fundamental importance in world sport,
this book is essential reading for any serious student or scholar
of sport management, sport business, Middle East studies, or sport
and society.
'A case study in human frailty, jealousy and desire ...
fascinating.' The Times, Best Books of 2019 'Meticulously
researched...superbly evocative and gripping...a narrative that
builds with the intensity of an approaching thunderstorm.' The
Spectator 'Sean O'Connor can't resist striking a theatrical note in
this "biography of murder".' Sunday Times Adultery, alcoholism,
drugs and murder on the suburban streets of Bournemouth. The
Rattenbury case of 1935 was one of the great tabloid sensations of
the interwar period. The glamorous femme fatale at the heart of the
story dominated the front pages for months, somewhere between the
rise of Hitler and the launch of the Queen Mary. With painstaking
research and access to brand new evidence, Sean O'Connor vividly
brings this epic story to life, from its beginnings in the south
London slums of the 1880s and the open vistas of the British
Columbian coast to its bloody climax in a respectable English
seaside resort. The Fatal Passion of Alma Rattenbury is a gripping
murder tale and a heartbreaking romance, as well as the biography
of a vital, modern woman trapped between the freedoms of two world
wars and suffocated by the conformity of peacetime. A startlingly
prescient parable for our times, it is the story of a protagonist
who dared to challenge the status quo only to be crucified by
public opinion, pilloried by the press and punished by the
relentless machinery of the British legal system. With a wealth of
fascinating period detail, from its breathtaking opening to its
shocking conclusion, The Fatal Passion of Alma Rattenbury is a true
story as enthralling, provocative and moving as any work of
fiction.
The Middle East is one of the fastest growing and significant
markets in world sport, as well as a powerful source of investment
in sport. Bids for the Olympics in 2020 and the soccer World Cup in
2022, as well as remarkable investments in Formula One motor
racing, horse racing and English Premier League soccer clubs,
demonstrate the strength of interest, the depth of resource and the
technical expertise maintained by sport business interests in the
region.
Sport Management in the Middle East is the first book to offer a
serious and in-depth analysis of the business and management of
sport in the region. Written by a team of world leading researchers
in Middle Eastern sport, and illustrated in full colour throughout,
the book examines the importance of sport in the Middle East and
introduces its particular management processes, structures and
cultures. As well as providing an overview of the region s sporting
strategy and key stakeholders, the book also offers a number of
detailed case-studies of sport in individual Middle Eastern
countries. A unique guide to sport management in a region of
fundamental importance in world sport, this book is essential
reading for any serious student or scholar of sport management,
sport business, Middle East studies, or sport and society."
Between the trials of Oscar Wilde in the 1890s and the beginnings
of legal reforms in the 1960s, the West End stage was dominated by
the work of gay playwrights. Many of their plays, such as Private
Lives, Blithe Spirit and The Deep Blue Sea are established classics
and continue to inform our culture. In this fascinating book,
covering both familiar and lesser-known works, Sean O'Connor
examines the legacy of Wilde as a playwright and as a gay man, and
explores in the works of Somerset Maugham, Noel Coward and Terence
Rattigan the resonance of Wilde's agenda for tolerance and his
creed of individuality. O'Connor contextualises these plays against
the enormous social and historical changes of the twentieth
century. He also examines the legal restrictions which regulated
the personal lives of these writers and required them to evolve
sophisticated strategies in order to express on stage, albeit
obliquely, their dilemmas as gay men. From the delicate homoerotic
frissons of Rattigan's early comedies to Coward's defiantly pro-sex
stance, Straight Acting is a provocative and witty insight into the
subtly subversive tactics of gay writers working in that apparently
most conservative of forms, the 'well-made play'.
The Caithness coast. Winter 1745. Rebellion year. A half-mad earl
witnesses a murder. But seeing the appalling decision the killer
had taken leads him to invent his 'game of life' - The Prisoner's
Dilemma - and he writes to his old friend, David Hume, inviting him
to his ancient stronghold to explore its meaning. Hume is only too
pleased to go. He has just met Adam Smith and the two of them have
disagreed about man's instinct for survival - and how compassion
can exist in a world driven by self-interest. But before Hume's
discussions with the earl can begin, two strangers arrive from
Prussia who will turn their lives upside down - and attract the
attentions of the English army. As the pace of the story quickens
to a claustrophobic climax, the greatest questions of the age
sluice wildly about the action and people find themselves driven
relentlessly towards their destinies in love and betrayal, ambition
and failure and, eventually, in life and death. But as the secrets
of game theory unfold the characters' motivations, and their
deceits and feints are laid bare, a simpler story is exposed- it is
the compelling tale of three utterly ruthless men, each of whom is
determined to win for himself the love of an extraordinary woman.
Who will win? And why?
Sean O'Connor's lovers, other stories, and words is one of the most
important philosophical works of the 21st century, the first phase
of a philosophy he is ever creating, developing, and cultivating; a
process "surpassing absolutism to a point of an ever expanding
universe of unlimited possibility and complete interconnectivity."
Via solely connecting words, "the way people throughout history
have connected stars and drawn constellations," he constructs a way
of thinking that creates and describes values, making a resource
and a blessing of everything he perceives and considers. Written
and published before the philosopher was 24, O'Connor has planted
the seeds for a lifetime worth of thought to create and share.
Accompanied by a fascinating, amusing, and at times, quite erotic
collection of short stories, this book shines in the midst of the
cynicism, economic struggle, and materialism which desensitized the
postmodern era in which it was written.
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