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Penguin And The Leviathan: How Cooperation Triumphs Over Self-Interest (2011)

by Yochai Benkler(Favorite Author)
3.66 of 5 Votes: 1
ISBN
129901030X (ISBN13: 9781299010307)
languge
English
genre
publisher
Crown Business
review 1: The Penguin and the Leviathan by Yochai Benkler"The Penguin and the Leviathan" it's the interesting book about the dynamics of cooperation and working in collaboration in the 21st Century. The main thesis of this book is to debunk the notion of a selfish human nature and how this knowledge can better serve our societies. Israeli-American author and professor of Law, Yochai Benkler, uses the latest in multiple converging scientific fields and a variety of examples to illustrate the power of cooperation. This 272-page is composed of the following ten chapters: 1. The Penguin vs. the Leviathan, 2. Nature vs. Culture, 3. Stubborn Children, New York City Doormen and Why Obesity Is Contagious: Psychological and Social Influences on Cooperation, 4. I/You, Us/Them: Empathy an... mored Group Identity in Human Cooperation, 5. Why Don't We Sit Down and Talk About It?, 6. Equal Halves: Fairness in Cooperation, 7. What's Right Is Right -- or at Least Normal: Morals and Norms in Cooperation, 8. For Love or Money: Rewards, Punishments, and Motivation, 9. The Business of Cooperation and 10. How to Raise a Penguin.Positives: 1. The very interesting and practical topic of cooperation applied to many facets of the human experience.2. The author's positive outlook is refreshing and his personality comes through in the narrative.3. Despite making use of the latest in various scientific fields the book is very accessible.4. The author does a wonderful job of describing the Leviathan approach to society and why there are better methods now.5. The strongest strength of this book is the many practical examples of cooperation in the many endeavors of the human experience. Excellent examples that clearly show the advantages of a more progressive approach to cooperation in business, government and society as a whole. 6. The shift from an authoritarian to a more humane and collaborative approach.7. The science behind our innate predisposition to cooperate. Good use of neuroscience and biology (evolution). "In practically, no human society examined under controlled conditions have the majority of people consistently behaved selfishly". Good stuff.8. Debunks the myth of self-interest. A look at why the myth persisted. 9. Collaboration in the animal kingdom. 10. Social influences on cooperation. What fosters cooperation. Fascinating studies.11. Neuroscience and the biological foundations for empathy. 12. Communication, communication, communication. Mediation as a model of conflict resolution.13. The importance of fairness in cooperation in economics, politics and social psychology.14. The importance of morals and standards in establishing norms that lead to cooperation. Many great examples.15. Debunking the notion that self-interest is the main driver behind our behavior. Very interesting and thought provoking.16. The most important factors in determining compliance.17. The success of free and open-source software. An interesting discussion.18. Three major factors why executive compensation fails in enhancing company performance.19. The business of cooperation is an interesting chapter that covers high-performance organizations that thrive on cooperation. Even military applications. The music industry.20. The future of cooperation. Benkler provides a list of levers to be the key ingredients of successful, practical and cooperative systems.Negatives: 1. Overall, the book is stuck on one theme: cooperation versus self-interest which is not necessarily bad but the transition between sub topics is executed poorly. 2. I would have liked to have seen the author support his arguments against stronger opposing views instead of less practical extreme views of Thomas Hobbes. 3. I think a better title would serve this book better. Ironically, the author provides examples on how framing certain studies have a direct impact on the results. The author's lack of name recognition can't overcome the book's vague title. How many more book would have been sold with a better cover and title?4. Some of the game theory will throw some readers off. 5. The author shows how open-source software works but never once mentions Apple that takes an opposing view. 6. A misspell here and there, commonweal instead of commonwealth. Nitpicky...7. No bibliography, notes or source material.In summary, I enjoyed reading this book. As an engineer and manager, I have been trained in the archaic robotic Just-In-Time(JIT)and other similar top-down approaches to the now more flexible and cooperative styles, so the book's many practical examples resonated with me. Benkler succeeds in driving home his main thesis of cooperation over self interest by providing many interesting examples throughout the book. The lack of source material and references hurts those of us who would like to pursue some of the topics in more depth. That being said, Benkler provides a very useful and positive outlook on how to improve societies via a cooperative approach that does not necessarily disregard elements of self interest. If you want to learn more about the power of cooperation, this is a recommended book. Further suggestions: "Good Strategy Bad Strategy" by Richard P. Rumelt, "What Money Can't Buy" by Michael J. Sandel, "Human" by Michael S. Gazzaniga, "50 Popular Beliefs that People Think Are True" by Guy P. Harrison, "Lying" by Sam Harris, "The Better Angel of Our Nature" and "The Blank Slate" by Steven Pinker, "The Compass of Pleasure" David J. Linden, "Hardwired Behavior" by Laurence Tancredi and "Mistakes Were Made" by Carol Tavris.
review 2: This book seemed like it would be really interesting. But it felt more like a short article that had been stretched out into a book. I know the author is a serious academic, and this was his attempt to present his work to a broader audience. But it almost felt too dumbed down. His points seemed more like casual observations than conclusions based on extensive scientific research. And because this book uses a lot of internet-age examples of cooperation, it almost feels outdated already. Wikipedia, Linux, couchsurfing, etc. seem like old stories at this point. Finally, there were so many caveats to his advice on how to design systems to harness cooperation that it seemed it would be difficult to apply. less
Reviews (see all)
SayuAi
This is a refreshing book about the power of cooperation, trust and fairness.
MissEastSoldier
A must read for all those interested in the sphere of human cooperation.
Jason
Do yourself a favor and just reread The Wealth of Networks.
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