CHAPTER 9
Changing One’s Own Mind
AT THE BEGINNING of this book I described how the author Nicholson Baker came to change his mind about the preferred furnishing of his apartment. Where once he was convinced that he desired exotic furnishings consisting of—of all things—backhoes, one day he awoke to realize that he had rejected that idea. What’s more, he could not put his finger on the exact moment or way that he’d come to change his mind; it had occurred gradually, over time, presumably as a result of any number of small shifts in his perceptions and mental representations.
Indeed, of all the explorations of mind change that we’ve covered so far in this book, from leaders addressing their nations to a therapist interpreting the dreams of a fragile ...
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