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Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life Hardcover – March 2, 2021
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In 12 Rules for Life, clinical psychologist and celebrated professor at Harvard and the University of Toronto Dr. Jordan B. Peterson helped millions of readers impose order on the chaos of their lives. Now, in this bold sequel, Peterson delivers twelve more lifesaving principles for resisting the exhausting toll that our desire to order the world inevitably takes.
In a time when the human will increasingly imposes itself over every sphere of life—from our social structures to our emotional states—Peterson warns that too much security is dangerous. What’s more, he offers strategies for overcoming the cultural, scientific, and psychological forces causing us to tend toward tyranny, and teaches us how to rely instead on our instinct to find meaning and purpose, even—and especially—when we find ourselves powerless.
While chaos, in excess, threatens us with instability and anxiety, unchecked order can petrify us into submission. Beyond Order provides a call to balance these two fundamental principles of reality itself, and guides us along the straight and narrow path that divides them.
- Print length432 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPortfolio
- Publication dateMarch 2, 2021
- Dimensions6.3 x 1.37 x 9.27 inches
- ISBN-100593084640
- ISBN-13978-0593084649
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“We live in a time when so many young (and not so young) people feel lost . . . Mr. Peterson talks about the attitudes that will help find the path. It is not a politically correct or officially approved path, but it is an intensely practical and yet heightened one: This life you’re living has meaning.”
—PEGGY NOONAN, Wall Street Journal
“Jordan Peterson is universally revered—and feared—for his incredible intellect and emotional insight.”
—DAVE RUBIN, host of The Rubin Report and author of Don’t Burn This Book
“The Peterson way is a harsh way, but it is an idealistic way—and for millions of young men, it turns out to be the perfect antidote to the cocktail of coddling and accusation in which they are raised.”
—DAVID BROOKS, New York Times
“The world needs Jordan Peterson.”
—DOUGLAS MURRAY, author of The Madness of Crowds
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
If you are at work, and called upon to do what makes you contemptuous of yourself—weak and ashamed, likely to lash out at those you love, unwilling to perform productively, and sick of your life—it is possible that it is time to meditate, consider, strategize, and place yourself in a position where you are capable of saying no.[1] Perhaps you will garner additional respect from the people you are opposing on moral grounds, even though you may still pay a high price for your actions. Perhaps they will even come to rethink their stance—if not now, with time (as their own consciences might be plaguing them in that same still small manner).
Perhaps you should also be positioning yourself for a lateral move— into another job, for example, noting as you may, “This occupation is deadening my soul, and that is truly not for me. It is time to take the painstaking steps necessary to organize my CV, and to engage in the difficult, demanding, and often unrewarding search for a new job” (but you have to be successful only once). Maybe you can find something that pays better and is more interesting, and where you are working with people who not only fail to kill your spirit, but positively rejuvenate it. Maybe following the dictates of conscience is in fact the best possible plan that you have—at minimum, otherwise you have to live with your sense of self-betrayal and the knowledge that you put up with what you truly could not tolerate. Nothing about that is good.
I might get fired. Well, prepare now to seek out and ready yourself for another job, hopefully better (or prepare yourself to go over your manager’s head with a well-prepared and articulate argument). And do not begin by presuming that leaving your job, even involuntarily, is necessarily for the worst.
I am afraid to move. Well, of course you are, but afraid compared to what? Afraid in comparison to continuing in a job where the center of your being is at stake; where you become weaker, more contemptible, more bitter, and more prone to pressure and tyranny over the years? There are few choices in life where there is no risk on either side, and it is often necessary to contemplate the risks of staying as thoroughly as the risks of moving. I have seen many people move, sometimes after several years of strategizing, and end up in better shape, psychologically and pragmatically, after their time in the desert.
Perhaps no one else would want me. Well, the rejection rate for new job applications is extraordinarily high. I tell my clients to assume 50:1, so their expectations are set properly. You are going to be passed over, in many cases, for many positions for which you are qualified. But that is rarely personal. It is, instead, a condition of existence, an inevitable consequence of somewhat arbitrary subjection to the ambivalent conditions of worth characterizing society. It is the consequence of the fact that CVs are easy to disseminate and difficult to process; that many jobs have unannounced internal candidates (and so are just going through the motions); and that some companies keep a rolling stock of applicants, in case they need to hire quickly. That is an actuarial problem, a statistical problem, a baseline problem—and not necessarily an indication that there is something specifically flawed about you. You must incorporate all that sustainingly pessimistic realism into your expectations, so that you do not become unreasonably downhearted. One hundred and fifty applications, carefully chosen; three to five interviews thereby acquired. That could be a mission of a year or more. That is much less than a lifetime of misery and downward trajectory. But it is not nothing. You need to fortify yourself for it, plan, and garner support from people who understand what you are up to and are realistically appraised of the difficulty and the options.
Now it may also be that you are lagging in the development of your skills and could improve your performance at work so that your chances of being hired elsewhere are heightened. But there is no loss in that. You cannot effectively pronounce “no” in the presence of corrupt power when your options to move are nonexistent. In consequence, you have a moral obligation to place yourself in a position of comparative strength, and to do then what is necessary to capitalize on that strength. You may also have to think through worst-case situations and to discuss them with those who will be affected by your decisions. But it is once again worth realizing that staying where you should not be may be the true worst-case situation: one that drags you out and kills you slowly over decades. That is not a good death, even though it is slow, and there is very little in it that does not speak of the hopeless- ness that makes people age quickly and long for the cessation of career and, worse, life. That is no improvement. As the old and cruel cliché goes: If you must cut off a cat’s tail, do not do it half an inch at a time. You may well be in for a few painful years of belated recognition of insufficiency, and required to send out four or five or ten job applications a week, knowing full well that the majority will be rejected with less than a second look. But you need to win the lottery only once, and a few years of difficulty with hope beat an entire dejected lifetime of a degenerating and oppressed career.
And let us be clear: It is not a simple matter of hating your job be- cause it requires you to wake up too early in the morning, or to drag yourself to work when it is too hot or cold or windy or dry or when you are feeling low and want to curl up in bed. It is not a matter of frustration generated when you are called on to do things that are menial or necessary such as emptying garbage cans, sweeping floors, cleaning bathrooms, or in any other manner taking your lowly but well- deserved place at the bottom of the hierarchy of competence—even of seniority. Resentment generated by such necessary work is most often merely ingratitude, inability to accept a lowly place at the beginning, unwillingness to adopt the position of the fool, or arrogance and lack of discipline. Refusal of the call of conscience is by no means the same thing as irritation about undesirably low status.
That rejection—that betrayal of soul—is truly the requirement to perform demonstrably counterproductive, absurd, or pointless work; to treat others unjustly and to lie about it; to engage in deceit, to betray your future self; to put up with unnecessary torture and abuse (and to silently watch others suffer the same treatment). That rejection is the turning of a blind eye, and the agreement to say and do things that betray your deepest values and make you a cheat at your own game. And there is no doubt that the road to hell, personally and socially, is paved not so much with good intentions as with the adoption of attitudes and undertaking of actions that inescapably disturb your con- science.
Do not do what you hate.
[1] Perhaps not just once, because that makes your reaction too impulsive; perhaps not just twice, because that still may not constitute sufficient evidence to risk undertaking what might be a genuine war; but definitively three times, when a pattern has been clearly established.
Product details
- Publisher : Portfolio
- Publication date : March 2, 2021
- Language : English
- Print length : 432 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0593084640
- ISBN-13 : 978-0593084649
- Item Weight : 1.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.3 x 1.37 x 9.27 inches
- Book 2 of 2 : 12 Rules for Life
- Best Sellers Rank: #8,153 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3 in Popular Applied Psychology
- #35 in Philosophy of Ethics & Morality
- #67 in Success Self-Help
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jordan Peterson is a Canadian clinical psychologist, cultural critic, and professor of psychology at the University of Toronto. His main areas of study are the psychology of religious and ideological belief, and the assessment and improvement of personality and performance.
From 1993 to 1997, Peterson lived in Arlington, Massachusetts, while teaching and conducting research at Harvard University as an assistant and an associate professor in the psychology department. During his time at Harvard, he studied aggression arising from drug and alcohol abuse, and supervised a number of unconventional thesis proposals. Afterwards, he returned to Canada and took up a post as a professor at the University of Toronto.
In 1999, Routledge published Peterson's Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief. The book, which took Peterson 13 years to complete, describes a comprehensive theory for how we construct meaning, represented by the mythical process of the exploratory hero, and provides an interpretation of religious and mythical models of reality presented in a way that is compatible with modern scientific understanding of how the brain works. It synthesizes ideas drawn from narratives in mythology, religion, literature and philosophy, as well as research from neuropsychology, in "the classic, old-fashioned tradition of social science."
Peterson's primary goal was to examine why individuals, not simply groups, engage in social conflict, and to model the path individuals take that results in atrocities like the Gulag, the Auschwitz concentration camp and the Rwandan genocide. Peterson considers himself a pragmatist, and uses science and neuropsychology to examine and learn from the belief systems of the past and vice versa, but his theory is primarily phenomenological. In the book, he explores the origins of evil, and also posits that an analysis of the world's religious ideas might allow us to describe our essential morality and eventually develop a universal system of morality.
Harvey Shepard, writing in the Religion column of the Montreal Gazette, stated: "To me, the book reflects its author's profound moral sense and vast erudition in areas ranging from clinical psychology to scripture and a good deal of personal soul searching. ... Peterson's vision is both fully informed by current scientific and pragmatic methods, and in important ways deeply conservative and traditional."
In 2004, a 13-part TV series based on his book Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief aired on TVOntario. He has also appeared on that network on shows such as Big Ideas, and as a frequent guest and essayist on The Agenda with Steve Paikin since 2008.
In 2013, Peterson began recording his lectures ("Personality and Its Transformations", "Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief") and uploading them to YouTube. His YouTube channel has gathered more than 600,000 subscribers and his videos have received more than 35 million views as of January 2018. He has also appeared on The Joe Rogan Experience, The Gavin McInnes Show, Steven Crowder's Louder with Crowder, Dave Rubin's The Rubin Report, Stefan Molyneux's Freedomain Radio, h3h3Productions's H3 Podcast, Sam Harris's Waking Up podcast, Gad Saad's The Saad Truth series and other online shows. In December 2016, Peterson started his own podcast, The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast, which has 37 episodes as of January 10, 2018, including academic guests such as Camille Paglia, Martin Daly, and James W. Pennebaker, while on his channel he has also interviewed Stephen Hicks, Richard J. Haier, and Jonathan Haidt among others. In January 2017, he hired a production team to film his psychology lectures at the University of Toronto.
Peterson with his colleagues Robert O. Pihl, Daniel Higgins, and Michaela Schippers produced a writing therapy program with series of online writing exercises, titled the Self Authoring Suite. It includes the Past Authoring Program, a guided autobiography; two Present Authoring Programs, which allow the participant to analyze their personality faults and virtues in terms of the Big Five personality model; and the Future Authoring Program, which guides participants through the process of planning their desired futures. The latter program was used with McGill University undergraduates on academic probation to improve their grades, as well since 2011 at Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University. The Self Authoring Programs were developed partially from research by James W. Pennebaker at the University of Texas at Austin and Gary Latham at the Rotman School of Management of the University of Toronto. Pennebaker demonstrated that writing about traumatic or uncertain events and situations improved mental and physical health, while Latham demonstrated that personal planning exercises help make people more productive. According to Peterson, more than 10,000 students have used the program as of January 2017, with drop-out rates decreasing by 25% and GPAs rising by 20%.
In May 2017 he started new project, titled "The psychological significance of the Biblical stories", a series of live theatre lectures in which he analyzes archetypal narratives in Genesis as patterns of behaviour vital for both personal, social and cultural stability.
His upcoming book "12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos" will be released on January 23rd, 2018. It was released in the UK on January 16th. Dr. Peterson is currently on tour throughout North America, Europe and Australia.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book thought-provoking, noting how it melds psychology with philosophy and offers deep insights. The writing is meticulously crafted with plain language, and customers appreciate how each chapter is a world in itself, providing a fascinating journey into the human world. Customers praise the artwork, with one highlighting the exquisite illustrations by Juliette Fogra, and they value the book's truthfulness and heartfelt approach to life.
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Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as brilliant and worth careful reading, with one customer noting it's an excellent addition to the author's first book.
"The book lived up to its predecessor! Despite my skepticism if we need more rules for life (i mean God stopped at 10 right? Why 24?),..." Read more
"...The author has an amazing talent for seamlessly combining important ideas from all of these disparate fields in a manner that manages to be..." Read more
"...The book is a gem. Lazy thinkers or change-reluctant readers may resist the workout, but they'll lose out...." Read more
"...for Life is the highly anticipated follow-up to Jordan Peterson's bestselling book, 12 Rules for Life...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, describing it as a deeply profound guide that offers more thoughts to ponder and explains ideas with depth.
"...I realized that the book contained many practical wisdom that will help us navigate through life" Read more
"Dr. Peterson’s strikingly personal account of his struggle with his family’s serious physical illnesses as well as his own addiction, recovery and..." Read more
"...Present was the distillation of common sensical (but often unarticulated) ideas, but absent were the trite catch phrases and easy fixes that plague..." Read more
"...appreciated most was how Peterson’s advice is both philosophical and practical, grounded in deep psychological insights, but also applicable to real-..." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its meticulous content and plain language, with one customer highlighting its concise descriptions of thoughts.
"...is invariably fascinating, filled with historical notes, literary analyses, scriptural interpretations, and--my personal favorites--psychological..." Read more
"...and bit less academic and footnotey, but just as direct and linguistically precise. That's always a treat...." Read more
"...He has a talent for distilling complex ideas into clear and understandable language, making the book easy to follow and enjoyable to read...." Read more
"...with each chapter offering a fresh perspective and a renewed sense of clarity...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's heartfelt approach, with one review noting its deep humanity and another highlighting its focus on gratitude in the face of tragedy.
"...and taking inventory of past traumas, overcoming resentment, and living in gratitude. This book is an affirmation of existence over nihilism...." Read more
"...Anxiety does not imply the ‘Need’ for anti-psychotics. Anxiety is normal phenomenon and can easily be a necessary precursor to further..." Read more
"A great foray into looking for hope and recovery in our dreary world...." Read more
"...helped me focus on what is important, how to be more empathetic, and of higher service to my community through efficient use of..." Read more
Customers appreciate the narrative quality of the book, noting that each chapter is a world in itself and provides a fascinating journey into the human experience.
"...focusing on how individuals can find meaning, purpose, and direction amid chaos...." Read more
"...like embarking on a journey of self-discovery, with each chapter offering a fresh perspective and a renewed sense of clarity...." Read more
"...He calls things like they are, he connects tangbile examples from familiar stories and myths to articulate his points and helps to create a..." Read more
"...The book becomes complex when he goes around pure abstract concepts, but this complexity might be only my perception as my first language is not..." Read more
Customers appreciate the truthfulness of the book, with one noting its logic and sincerity, while another finds it more definitive than the author's previous work.
"...in love, humility, honesty and gratitude. Peterson argues against all ideologies...." Read more
"...We care that you're genuine, sincere and transparent in your own struggles. Life is suffering, indisputable. Right?..." Read more
"...it has genuine coherent information that will make you a happier more fulfilled person. get this book and read it as soon as you can." Read more
"...agenda other than to uncover the goodness in people, and reveal the truth of the world. Give this a chance if you've read his first book already...." Read more
Customers appreciate the visual elements of the book, with fantastic artwork and thought-provoking chapter illustrations, and one customer noting the nice and glossy cover.
"...He also delves deeply into new and interesting illustrations to exemplify drawing oneself out of a life of tyrannical order...." Read more
"...worth your time nevertheless; finally, I want to say that the artwork is fantastic and seems like the one that you could encounter in classical..." Read more
"...Books don't capture his wit and humility. The chapter illustrations are very thought provoking; He had an interesting interview with the illustrator..." Read more
"...BEYOND order, is really BEYOND beautiful...." Read more
Customers appreciate the pacing of the book, with several noting it makes an excellent pairing with other works, and one customer highlighting how it ties together the opening statement perfectly.
"...remarkable: it is a self-help book that does not insult the psychologically literate reader...." Read more
"His 2 books make an excellent pairing...." Read more
"...The first I found to have more humor and light-heartedness to it...." Read more
"...The irony is really quite stunning." Read more
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A Thought-Provoking Sequel to 12 Rules for Life
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2025The book lived up to its predecessor! Despite my skepticism if we need more rules for life (i mean God stopped at 10 right? Why 24?), I realized that the book contained many practical wisdom that will help us navigate through life
- Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2021Dr. Peterson’s strikingly personal account of his struggle with his family’s serious physical illnesses as well as his own addiction, recovery and associated mental and physical illness—including pneumonia—in Canadian, American, Russian and Serbian facilities is perhaps the most moving element of his work. If you only read one chapter of this book, read the “Overture,” where he notes:
…it is also true that the meaningful immersion in what I was writing, which continued during the entire time that I have related—excepting my unconscious month in Russia—provided me both with a reason to live and a means of testing the viability of the thoughts with which I wrestled.
To me, his struggle with disease and suffering is evident in the somber and more nuanced approach of Beyond Order—not an optimistic American-style self-help guide like 12 Rules for Life, but a diary of psychological discovery and insights informed by the tremendous suffering of the authors tormented soul. Which makes it a better book, in my opinion, because this time Dr. Peterson not only talked the talk but walked the walk. Thus, the book not only provides advice but also a concrete example of how to live, in its testimony. Perhaps not quite the visit of Er to the underworld in Plato’s Republic, but almost.
No wonder Dr. Peterson’s writing recalls classic myths about trips to hell and back by Orpheus, Odysseus, Psyche, Heracles, Alcestis, Aeneas, Hippolytus, Theseus or Sissyphus, among others:
Is it not possible (even though it may not always deliver us from the terrible situation we find ourselves in) that we would all be more able to deal with the uncertainty, the horrors of nature, the tyranny of culture, and the malevolence of ourselves and others if we were better and more courageous people? If we strived toward higher values? If we were more truthful? Wouldn’t the beneficial elements of experience be more likely to manifest themselves around us? Is it not possible, if your goals were noble enough, your courage adequate, your aim at the truth unerring, that the Good thereby produced would…well, not justify the horror? That is not exactly right, but it still comes close. Such attitudes and actions might at least provide us with meaning sufficient to stop our encounter with that terror and horror from corrupting us and turning the surrounding world into something all too closely resembling hell.
His struggle has convinced him that reason has its limits, and experience is a powerful teacher. While reason may be sufficient to understand order, it is insufficient to withstand chaos such as he experienced:
…chaos is where what we do not expect or have remained blind to leaps forward from the potential that surrounds us. The fact that something has occurred many times in the past is no guarantee that it will continue to occur in the same manner. There exists, externally, a domain beyond what we know and can predict. Chaos in anomaly, novelty, unpredictability, transformation, disruption, and all too often, descent, as what we have come to take for granted reveals itself to be unreliable.
Descent into the hell of addiction, withdrawal, illness and recovery, in the case of Dr. Peterson’s long voyage into the underworld and back. His journey is what makes his testimony a powerful argument for the notion of redemption through suffering, in keeping with traditional imitation of Christ in general, and Russian Orthodox tradition in particular, especially Doestoevsky’s near-death experiences which led him to find God following a mock execution and years of cruel Siberian exile.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2021When I read and reviewed the first 12 Rules for Life book, I described it as a sort of self-help book for people who don't like self-help books. Present was the distillation of common sensical (but often unarticulated) ideas, but absent were the trite catch phrases and easy fixes that plague much of the genre. I'm pleased to report that the same can be said of this second volume.
While this is ostensibly a self-help book that distills important psychological ideas into a dozen simple "rules" for living a better, more meaningful, and more productive life, it's much more than that. It's a wide-ranging treatise on psychology, philosophy, theology, and occasionally even politics (though not too much, and always in a fairly balanced treatment). It's true that the rules themselves are somewhat simplistic--some might even say self-evident. And that's a fair statement. The value in such a book as this, though, is less in the list of rules as they can be read in the table of contents, but in the immeasurably rich explanations and analyses that explain--at a remarkably deep level--the sound psychological, philosophical, historical, theological, mythological, and narrative reasons for each of the rules.
The author has an amazing talent for seamlessly combining important ideas from all of these disparate fields in a manner that manages to be accessible to a wide audience without ever speaking down or boring readers who are already familiar with his subjects. It's a rare book indeed that can transition so effortlessly between discussions of cognitive neuroscience to the Bible to Harry Potter and back.
That's true of both this book and its predecessor (to which I also gave a five-star review). However, I have to say in all honesty, this book manages to escape the all too common pitfalls of sequels and indeed might even surpass the original (though I maintain that it's best read less as a sequel and more as a second volume of a single long work). Admittedly, some of the examples revisit subjects already familiar from the previous book (or from Peterson's other writings or lectures), but these few stories are important enough that they bear repeating. More importantly, the new material is invariably fascinating, filled with historical notes, literary analyses, scriptural interpretations, and--my personal favorites--psychological case studies.
With regard to that last category, this book manages to accomplish something remarkable: it is a self-help book that does not insult the psychologically literate reader. Instead, it draws deeply from the psychological literature (particularly the psychoanalysts, though certainly not limited to them alone) and might even inspire some readers to pursue further study of psychology or even a career in clinical practice.
Most importantly, the book differentiates itself from the bulk of its genre by eschewing the easy and the feel-good in favor of the real and the substantial. There are no trite mantras, no happy cliches, no greeting card philosophies. Instead, there are real--often brutal, but equally often hopeful--psychological insights. This is the kind of self-help book that could genuinely help the reader who heeds its advice, precisely because it offers oft-difficult substance rather than simple but ultimately meaningless pronouncements.
At a time when much of the world seems shallowly moored at best--and completely unmoored at worst--this book is a godsend for those looking to lead a more meaningful (and with any luck, happier) existence. I cannot recommend it (and its predecessor, though you can easily read the books in any order) highly enough.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2025Good for young adults or adults.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2024In this follow-up to his bestselling 12 Rules for Life, Jordan Peterson offers another set of profound insights into navigating the complexities of life. Beyond Order explores the balance between stability and change, focusing on how individuals can find meaning, purpose, and direction amid chaos. Each of the twelve rules presented is designed to guide readers in taking responsibility, confronting adversity, and cultivating a meaningful life.
What I appreciated most was how Peterson’s advice is both philosophical and practical, grounded in deep psychological insights, but also applicable to real-world challenges. His writing challenges the reader to reflect on their own values and choices, making this a thought-provoking and transformative read.
If you’re interested in self-improvement, psychology, or exploring deeper meanings in life, Beyond Order is a must-read.
5.0 out of 5 starsIn this follow-up to his bestselling 12 Rules for Life, Jordan Peterson offers another set of profound insights into navigating the complexities of life. Beyond Order explores the balance between stability and change, focusing on how individuals can find meaning, purpose, and direction amid chaos. Each of the twelve rules presented is designed to guide readers in taking responsibility, confronting adversity, and cultivating a meaningful life.A Thought-Provoking Sequel to 12 Rules for Life
Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2024
What I appreciated most was how Peterson’s advice is both philosophical and practical, grounded in deep psychological insights, but also applicable to real-world challenges. His writing challenges the reader to reflect on their own values and choices, making this a thought-provoking and transformative read.
If you’re interested in self-improvement, psychology, or exploring deeper meanings in life, Beyond Order is a must-read.
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Top reviews from other countries
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Germán MíguezReviewed in Spain on January 6, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars El libro es el que buscaba.
El libro está en perfectas condiciones y la entrega fue muy rápida.
- AseelReviewed in Saudi Arabia on June 26, 2023
4.0 out of 5 stars Read it
The book is soo good
- @Truly.TriedReviewed in Canada on February 28, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars MUST READ BOOK
Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life by Jordan B. Peterson is a must-read book for anyone looking to improve their lives. As a follow-up to his previous bestseller, 12 Rules for Life, this book goes beyond the original 12 rules and provides readers with 12 more rules for living a meaningful and purposeful life.
One of the great things about this book is how easy it is to read and understand. Peterson has a way of breaking down complex ideas into simple, easy-to-understand concepts. His writing is engaging and thought-provoking, and he presents his ideas in a way that is both informative and entertaining.
The 12 rules in this book cover a wide range of topics, from the importance of taking responsibility for your own life to the benefits of having a daily routine. Peterson uses his own experiences and insights to provide real-world examples of how these rules can be applied to everyday life.
One of the standout chapters in the book is Rule 4, "Notice That Opportunity Lurks Where Responsibility Has Been Abdicated." This chapter is particularly relevant in today's society, where many people are quick to blame others for their problems rather than taking responsibility for their own actions. Peterson argues that by taking responsibility, we open ourselves up to new opportunities and experiences that we may not have otherwise encountered.
This book is a fantastic book that is well worth the read. Peterson's insights and advice are invaluable, and his writing style is engaging and informative. Whether you're looking to improve your own life or simply gain a better understanding of the world around you, this book is sure to provide you with plenty of food for thought. Highly recommended!
Viviane Presa
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Arthur S. LimaReviewed in Brazil on March 10, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars A Filosofia da Responsabilidade
Peterson foi capaz de se superar, seguindo primorosamente a regra 4 de seu primeiro livro mainstream.
(Compare-se consigo mesmo como era ontem, não com como alguém é hoje)
Este livro mira o topo de rankings nas listas de melhores livros para ler na vida, para mim está entre os 5 melhores que já li, e sei que o lerei mais de uma vez. É muito relevante, tocando em assuntos significativos em grande abrangência e profundidade. Amizade, responsabilidade, significado, relacionamentos afetivos, saúde psíquica, liderança consciente e muitos outros.
Peterson é capaz de operacionalizar insights de todas as áreas de conhecimento que ele tem (E são muitas) e descrever motivos fortes o suficiente para persuadir o subconsciente! Tente convencer uma pessoa a escolher responsabilidade, e verá que não é uma tarefa fácil, e, creio, esta é a missão deste grande autor.
Mais sobre persuadir o subconsciente. Em sua terceira regra (Não esconda coisas não desejadas na névoa) é surpreendente o quanto Peterson consegue por meio da racionalidade mergulhar em assuntos sensíveis, e tentar salvar o leitor de más escolhas, embora hajam alternativas mais fáceis no curto prazo. Sinto que, ler este livro e refletir sobre cada seção é como ser atendido pelo psicólogo Peterson (Que medo!).
O que ficou claro para mim, ao concluir seu terceiro livro, é que a filosofia de Peterson, é uma de responsabilidade. Não que outras escolas não tenham advogado isso, mas a clareza que o autor articula e reúne textos para defender a ideia de que uma vida feliz é uma vida de responsabilidade, virtude e ética é chocante. Não só suas regras tem um aspecto de senso comum, mas seu texto tenta demonstrar ao leitor o "espírito" dessas mesmas regras. Eu não ousaria ser mais eloquente do que a regra 1 deste livro (Não denegrir descuidadamente as instituições sociais ou realizações artísticas) para colocar esse ponto. Em síntese, seja consciente sobre as consequências e significados de suas ações, se assim for, pode-se desafiar leis e regras rígidas.
Agora, o peso da responsabilidade não é pequeno. Invocando a linguagem do próprio autor, talvez responsabilidade seja outro nome do dragão. Guarda grandes desafios e riscos, além de gratas surpresas, aprendizados e recompensas. A maior de todas, significado para a vida.
Este livro é tão bom, que eu já aguardo sua versão traduzida para compartilhar com amigos e familiares, assim como fiz com o primeiro. Diria que aqueles que desejem encarar de verdade a jornada, ou aventura, em busca de sucesso verdadeiro devem ler este livro.
Este, de fato, é um livro de auto-ajuda. Suas reflexões são tão penetrantes, e lidam diretamente com autossabotagem, que é difícil passar "ileso" ao ler o livro com pelo menos uma moderada abertura para a mudança. Por ileso, quero dizer que o livro vai forçar o leitor não só a melhorar, mas trabalhar a fonte da iniciativa e da decisão. Ajudará a refletir sobre a questão fundamental: Porque mudar? Porque agora?
Não há tempo a perder. Compre, leia e dê uma cópia para um amigo. Com aquele bilhete: Estou te dando este livro, mas eu te amo!
Afinal, Peterson não passa a mão na cabeça. Nem em seus outros livros, nem nesse.
Ao meu ver, este, e 12 regras para vida, são a "tradução" do primeiro livro de Jordan B. Peterson (Maps of Meaning) para uma linguagem mais acessível. Um livro capaz de "revolucionar a psicologia da religião", e causar tamanho impacto entre os mais respeitados intelectuais dos campos da teologia, psicologia, mitologia e outros; é apenas um fortíssimo indício de que seu pensamento consolida revelações, ou ao menos organiza informações e percepções da ciência em múltiplas dimensões, que são capazes de gerar grande benefício e entendimento sobre questões importantes do ser humano.
A "regra" mais influente em todo o texto para mim foi (p.73)
"Pay attention, above all, even to what is monstrous and malevolent, and speak wisely and truthfully."
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xMancioReviewed in Italy on November 9, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Se quest'anno leggerete un solo libro: che sia questo
Proprio come 12 regole per la vita, Beyond Order è un capolavoro. Un libro stupendo che approfondisce quanto già costruito non più dandoci delle regole minime, ma insegandoci ad andare oltre non solo per vivere una vita piena di significato, ma, questa volta, per eccellere ed essere i migliori noi stessi possibili.
Nel libro Peterson tratta di psicologia, sociologia, letteratura, religione, è un libro enciclopedico che unisce una miriade di riferimenti, teorici, pratici e mitologici in un formulario da portare sempre con sè. C'è il Peterson professore, quello psicologo e c'è il Peterson uomo, tutti loro collaborano gli uni gli altri nel darsi una mano a darCI una mano. Ci mostra la strada davanti a noi, ripida e piena di sassi, che porta alla gioia e alla soddisfazione di se stessi.
Non vi confondente, non è il "solito" libro di auto aiuto, non sono commenti banali triti e ritriti, il libro vi metterà faccia a faccio coi vostri dubbi, le vostre debolezze, le vostre banalità ed i vostri errori, ma, citando uno dei suggerimenti di Peterson "non bisogna nascondere nella nebbia ciò che non ci piace". Il libro ci fa affrontare e, si spera, sconfiggere la parte peggiore di noi, per farci spiegare le ali.
Non fermatevi alle tante assurdità che dicono sull'autore, alcune delle sue idee possono sembrare ataviche, anacronistiche, persino campate in aria (non la penso così, ma rispetto chi lo fa), ma leggendo il suo libro vi garantisco che percepirete chiaramente l'intendo di dare una mano, di spendere una parola d'incoraggiamento per coloro che qualcosa del genere non l'hanno mai ricevuto.
Più di tutto mi sento non solo di lasciare 5 stelle, ma di ringraziare Peterson per il suo sincero sforzo nell'aiutare chi si sente alla deriva e cerca, letteralmente, un appiglio nel mare del caos.