The Official Website of Kendel Christensen





Developing
A Mature Perspective

I have heard it said, and it has become my belief, that
if a person would study one classic essay per week, then in a few short years,
they will be among the most educated people in the nation, earning the
equivalent of a degree in literature.  Below
is the start of a selection of articles and essays, arranged by topic, that I
consider classic—articles that, upon serious reflection, have the potential to
drastically improve the way a person views the world and approaches life (A
greater number of stars (*) indicates a superior level of transcendence):

 

Classics

 

Plato, The
Parable of the Cave
(8 Pages, ****)

 

Communication:

David Cain, “The Secret to Connecting With
People”
(4
Pages, ***)

David
Cain,
“How to Always
Have Something Better to Talk About Than the Weather”
(5 Pages, ***)

 

Education:

Eliot Butler, “Everybody is Ignorant, Only on
Different Subjects”

(16 Pages, ****)

 

Goals and
Achievement:

Advice from Elder Widtsoe
(3 Pages, ***)

 

Morality:

Clayton M.
Christensen,
“The Importance of Asking the Right
Questions”
(4
Pages, ****)

 

Understanding:

Chana, Joffe-Walt
and Alix Spiegel,
Psychology Of
Fraud: Why Good People Do Bad Things

(5 pages with comics, *****)

 

Worth Your Time:

http://inspirationandchai.com/Regrets-of-the-Dying.html

http://youarenotsosmart.com/2011/10/05/the-benjamin-franklin-effect/