J. M. Berger (1) (1967–)
Author of Extremism (The MIT Press Essential Knowledge series)
For other authors named J. M. Berger, see the disambiguation page.
Works by J. M. Berger
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Berger, John M.
- Birthdate
- 1967
- Gender
- male
- Organizations
- Brookings Institution
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Terrific story
Excellent storytelling. Nods to Sherlock Holmes, the Kobayoshi Maru scenario, and all the joys and horrors of modern day life - pandemics, conspiracy theories, social media ills. Loved this book.
Excellent storytelling. Nods to Sherlock Holmes, the Kobayoshi Maru scenario, and all the joys and horrors of modern day life - pandemics, conspiracy theories, social media ills. Loved this book.
This short book is exactly what I hoped it would be: a brief overview, some theory to move understanding beyond definition by example, some discussion of current thinking and issues, and a curated list of sources for further reading. I particularly appreciate the effort put into definitions and theoretical framing, which propose a path for moving beyond reflexive thinking about current threats.
Of course a book this small isn't comprehensive or the last word on anything. That's not its show more purpose. It is, however, an excellent starting point and shortcut to understanding a few key issues whose misunderstanding is at the root of many failed initiatives. show less
Of course a book this small isn't comprehensive or the last word on anything. That's not its show more purpose. It is, however, an excellent starting point and shortcut to understanding a few key issues whose misunderstanding is at the root of many failed initiatives. show less
Short book attempting to define extremism, give a bit of history, and explain what extremists do. Extremism in this book is defined as the belief that an in-group’s success or survival can never be separated from the need for hostile action against an out-group. Of course, the concepts of in-groups and out-groups are gone into a lot. A little attention was given to the psychology of it all, but not nearly enough. Even though huge masses of people suffer in all sorts of ways only a few show more become extremists. Why? That’s what I’d like to know more about. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 148
- Popularity
- #140,179
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 8
- Languages
- 1


