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Curiosity is not entertainment—it is a discipline that changes how you notice, decide, and create. If you have ever felt flooded with information yet starved of insight, this book offers a sharper way to think and act. Through field-tested tools, compact stories, and a set of daily practices, it turns vague intention into concrete inquiry so you can move from noise to signal in work and life. Along the way, it restores the pleasure of learning without the pressure to perform.
- Learn curiosity as a repeatable habit, not a personality trait
- Practise the Socratic method for everyday life to dissolve stuck problems
- Build durable problem-solving skills with falsifiable tests and cheap experiments
- Use creative thinking exercises that produce ideas on schedule, not by accident
- Apply cognitive psychology for personal growth to calibrate confidence and cut bias
- Install habits of inquiry that improve meetings, decisions, and relationships
Strengthen critical thinking for adults with clear frameworks and humane language
By the end, you will keep a personal bank of questions that change your life and a small set of rules that help you learn to think clearly when it matters most. This is an accessible, rigorous guide for thoughtful readers, makers, managers, teachers, and parents who want less performative certainty and more grounded progress—one well-aimed question at a time.

The Curiosity Cure

SKU: 9789374121672
$19.99 Regular Price
$16.48Sale Price
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  • Sanjan Mehta writes at the seam where thinking becomes practice. Raised between libraries and dinner-table debates, he learned early that good questions change the room long before answers arrive. His work blends the clear-eyed scepticism of the Socratic tradition with the hands-on pragmatism of builders, teachers, and social entrepreneurs he has advised across continents. Drawing on psychology, philosophy, and design, he helps readers replace performance with inquiry and certainty with calibrated confidence. When he is not drafting questions, he is listening for the ones people are afraid to ask.

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