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Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - Understanding the People around You (Filatova)

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  Today's publisher's pride is  Understanding the People around You  by Ekaterina Filatova, which reached #213 in psychology of personalities.  Book description: A Groundbreaking Introduction to Socionics—Now in English from the Founder of the Field Understanding the People Around You  by Dr. Ekaterina Filatova is the definitive guide to socionics—the personality type system rooted in Jung’s original theories and expanded by Russian psychologists into a dynamic model of human behavior, cognition, and relationships. Dr. Filatova, widely credited as the mother of modern socionics in Russia, brings her seminal work to English-speaking readers for the first time. With clarity and warmth, she offers a complete, accessible primer to the 16 socion personality types, their traits, and how they interact in real life. Inside you’ll find: – A self-scoring test to help you identify your socion type – Detailed portraits of each of the 16 types, linked to familiar literary an...

The Evolution of LREC in the U.S. Military: From Niche Concern to Strategic Competency

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  The U.S. military did not always speak in the language of LREC . For decades, language training existed, regional expertise was scattered across specialized communities, and cultural understanding was treated as a soft skill rather than a strategic asset. The modern concept of LREC — a unified triad of Language , Regional Expertise , and Culture — emerged only when the military recognized that technological superiority alone could not guarantee mission success. Early Roots: Who Started Talking About LREC, and When? Although the U.S. military has trained linguists since World War II, the integrated idea of LREC began gaining traction in the early 2000s, especially during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Commanders and policymakers increasingly recognized that understanding local languages and cultures was not optional — it was operationally decisive. By the mid‑2000s, the Department of Defense began formalizing this recognition. The Defense Language Office (DLO) and senior lead...

Brilliance and Disorder

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  We like to imagine brilliance as clean — a straight beam of light cutting through confusion. But most brilliance lives inside disorder. The mind that invents, composes, or discovers often does so in a storm. Disorder isn’t the opposite of intelligence; it’s the environment where intelligence learns to swim. The same neural speed that produces insight can also produce chaos. Thoughts arrive too fast to file. Emotions surge before reason catches up. The person who sees ten possibilities may struggle to choose one. Some people organize their brilliance through systems — lists, rituals, calendars, routines. Others organize through motion — conversation, improvisation, crisis. Both work, until they don’t. When the system breaks or the motion stops, disorder floods back in. The creative paradox Brilliance and disorder share a common root: pattern sensitivity . The mind that notices patterns also notices their breakdowns. It sees what others miss — and what others ignore. That awareness...