![]() ![]() This isn’t chaos, however, but rather liberated continuation of the original spirit and intention of the rules. ![]() It also repeatedly emphasizes the need for creative transformation, the need to change when the status quo has become corrupt. Yes, it does have the black cover, and it was written during a chaotic time in Peterson’s life. Peterson had referred to this arrangement in the introductory overture to his first book, and he calls that first book a work of “ordering principles.” But Beyond Order is not chaos so much as balance. The packaging of the books gives this away, as the two have identical cover designs except that the first is white while the second is black. Is it then the chaos book? Almost, but not quite.īeyond Order is indeed the yin to the previous yang. Whereas 12 Rules for Life offered order as “an antidote to chaos” (its subtitle), this book seeks to move “beyond” that order. Titled Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life, it’s packaged as a complement to the first. After nearly dying last year, Jordan Peterson is back with a sequel to his bestselling 12 Rules for Life. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |