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̵ 긮ν | [347] |
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Making Numbers Count | |
| Chip Heath 외 | ||
ǻ | Avid Reader Press | ||
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Dangerous Personalit | |
| Joe Navarro 외 | ||
ǻ | Rodale Books | ||
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Human + Machine | |
| Paul R. Daugherty 외 | ||
ǻ | Harvard Business Review Press | ||
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The Rise of the Mega | |
With few exceptions, human history can be viewed as an upward trend in population density. We evolved from nomadic “hunting and gathering” societies to tribal villages, then to small towns, and ultimately to the grand and glittering cities we see today throughout the industrialized world. | ||
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The Increasingly Bin | |
Over the past 15 years, the United States has become the world’s sole superpower, dwarfing every other nation in terms of economic and military might. And while Japan, Russia, and the EU have fallen further behind, one nation has emerged to join the U.S. as the primary driver of global prosperity: China. In astronomical terms, we might envision the U.S. and Chinese economies as two stars revolving about each other, while accelerating and pulling a host of planets along with them. | ||