Friday, February 22, 2008

人生必须知道的4种大智慧 zz

一、因果法则

有舍才有得,有付出才有回报,有耕耘才可能有收获是因果法则。看似简单,可人们做事似乎只重结果,忽视了方法与过程。播的种子与方法错了,怎会收获理想的果实?成功一定有方法,失败一定有原因!懂得并运用因果法则,物质富裕、身心健康就会变得容易。

二、心有定力

由于意识到万事万物的本质不是永恒不变的,都是变化的,所以,对待周边发生的一切事物变 化,从现象上就会以平和心接受。本着凡事内求的原则,以内省心探 究其源,不论顺逆,皆是成长之因。心有定力,就会有生命圆满的力量!心有定力的具体体现是能够做到放下过去,珍惜现在,发展未来,心灵即刻得到解脱,即是 活在当下的快乐。相反若是活在过去,不满现在,只希望未来之人,则是缺少智慧的人,烦恼不断。心有定力就会清楚:只有“现在”才是你唯一能真正拥有和掌握 的!若把握的不好,“现在”就可能变成不幸的“过去”;若把握得好,“现在”就会造就美好的未来。

三、中庸思想

不是骑在墙上,是两条腿走路;不是折中调和,是不走极端;是辩证处事,而非偏激待人。“中”是做事准,恰到好处;“庸”是做事狠,坚定不移。“中”是智慧,“庸”是勇气,“中庸”之人是智勇双全之士!

  四、道法自然

道是规律;法是效仿,依据;自然是规律的本源,宇宙运行的原则。做人做事应该求的就是个“道”——自然。做人的“道”体现的是真诚、平等、清净、精进;做事的“道”体现的是看开、随缘、感恩、内求。

  ◇真诚:一心一意,不虚假。搞假骗的是自己,良心不安,真诚心是道。

平等:人与人的问题,包括国与国之间的战争,多是我大你小、我优你劣这种人心不平等造成。

清净:不沾染恶习,待人不分高低贵贱,处事不计较你我多少。

精进:不懈努力,不停追求。所谓“逆水行舟,不进则退”。

看开:看透开悟,即明了世间万事万物没有一样是永恒不变的。的本质是体验中成长,目标设定后的过程体验是至关重要的,至于收获什么或多少,计算而不计较,所谓“只求耕耘,莫问收获”,才是快乐的智者境界!

看开就不会去执著结果的不变,就会少生烦恼这个副产品。

看开的人做的事,都是自利、利他乃至无我利他的事!

看开的人追求的都是过程中的成长!

看开的人由于没有了名利结果的包袱,反而在体验快乐的同时更易成功!

随缘—— 缘是条件,做事成功离不开条件,有些条件,尤其是客观条件非主观努力所能为。那么“山不过来,我就过去”——善尽心力,随缘变化有多好!一直在努力,又不 执著条件,轻松自在啊!智者会意识到外在环境是变化无常的,唯一能改变的是内心的状态。我们不可改变事情的结果,但可改变对事情的态度!

心不随境转=不随境起舞=不随烦恼起舞。

感恩——凡事感恩!好也感谢——理所应当;坏也感谢——亮眼明心;顺也感谢——阳光是美丽的;逆也感谢——成功总在挫折后。

别拒绝困难与挫折,困难在古希腊语中,意为“上帝授予之物”!接纳后才有惊喜,感恩心一定快乐!曾国藩的成功秘诀:“平生长进,全在承辱受挫之时。”

内求:行有不得,反求诸己!将注意力只放在自己是否想得对、说得对、做得对上。真正的财富源自内心!世人做事不得要领的一个主要误区是向外求,顺则罢,一旦是逆、苦,心中便也跟着逆、苦起来,多可怜!真心不变,调整自我,适应外界,进而改造外界——此适者生存之真谛!

遇事多做内省是一大成功秘诀。曾子(孔子的学生曾参)每日三省:

1做事是否忠乎——一心一意、竭尽全力。

2与人交往是否信乎——言而有信、行而守约。

3传授习乎——所学知识是否复习和练习。

To become a nation of Nobel Prize winners you have to practise thinking differently! zz

To become a nation of Nobel Prize winners you have to practise thinking differently!

Why is it that some countries or cultures have managed to get a lot of Nobel Prize winners while others have got very few or none at all? That is a question that I being from Sweden, the nation of Alfred Nobel, have recieved from a number of people in different countries, also a couple of times from people in China.
My answer is that there are basic differences between countries and cultures when it comes to education and equality, to authority and the upbringing of children and to creativity.
Let me give an example. One of my friends in Israel was for some years involved in training future teachers. In his class he had both Jewish and Palestinian students and he soon noticed a difference between them when they were asked a question that required some thinking and reasoning. Among the Jewish students each one gave his or her personal answer or comment, and each one tried to come up with something new that the previous speakers had not mentioned. The Palestinians, on the other hand, showed a different pattern. If anyone of them gave an answer or comment that got the approval from the teacher the others just repeated what the first one had said, presuming that the first student had come up with the expected and ”correct” answer.
This is an example of two cultures with different attitudes towards creativity and freethinking. One where children from very young ages in general are expected to think for themselves, to reason and argue, and another where most children are taught to think according to how parents, teachers, religious leaders or other authorities think.
There is a huge difference between on the one hand just thinking as the elders think and on the other hand basing your own thinking in respect for what elder generations have thought. In the latter case you hold the intellectual heritage in honour by developing it further. After all, in Jewish communities there are a strong sense of belonging to an old and rich culture and that does not prevent people from thinking for themselves and being creative! (However, also in Israel students in sekular schools perform more creative thinking than students in religious schools.)
If you are taught to just repeat ideas and knowledge, then you will have difficulties creating new knowledge and new understandings. It has of course always been like this, but today in our global world and with the fast development of technology etc, such tradition is devastating. It means that such a nation will be dependent on the creativity and innovations of other countries.
And there will be no Nobel Prize winners.
It will also mean that people will have difficulties getting advanced jobs. In the world today, when a lot of the knowledge that is taught in schools will be out of date within a few years, the most important skill to learn in schools is the skill of thinking – for example to think differently from what your parents and grandparents thought.
This being so, what needs to be done by those nations where there is a serious deficit of creativity and freethinking?

done. Short-term measures have to focus especially on hierarchical structures and traditions in companies, institutions and organisations, while long-term steps have to focus on the school system and also on the influence from parents and grandparents. In its essence it is about making the society intellectually more equal, regardless of rank, sex gender or age.
Of course, there are families, schools and working places in traditional societies where creativity flourish, and there are groups and communities in more modern societies where creativity is suppressed – also for example in Israel – but what is the general intellectual climate in the society?
What about hierarchical structures and traditions?
Many companies, institutions and organisations around the world have very strict hierarchies that limits the potentials to change and develop. Hierarchies in itself are not necessarily bad, but when subordinates for example are not invited – or even forbidden – to present suggestions and ideas to their superiors then those organisations have a real problem. If a company in our competitive world fail to use all available resources, then that company need a lot of luck in order to survive.
Warning signals to watch out for are inflexible ways of working, mania for titles, women on subordinate positions only, disdain for manual work, employees who do not know the visions and strategic goals of the company, complicated and formal ways for subordinates to make contact with managers, teams that can not work together, silent employees, inability to be self-critical or accept criticism…
What seems to be the most difficult for leaders of all kinds all over the world is to accept criticism from suordinates. That is a risky situation for any organization, which by that lose the potential resourse the critics make. Instead critics should be used as precious assets in the continuous development of the organization.
Parents – and grandparents – need to trust their authority without being authoritarians…
Hierarchical structures and traditions are common also in families. However, it is a sign of weakness, when parents do not trust their ability to be good examples for their children without having to act as authoritarians who always, without questioning, must be obeyed. The same counts for grandparents, who in countries like China play an extremely important role for taking care of their grandchildren.
If you want to create a culture of creativity and freethinking you need parents who from the very first start encourage and stimulate their children to be curious, to question, to be adventurous, to think differently…
The crucial challenge for parents is to transform their theoretical understandings about what is needed to support their children into practice when for example the family every day gather together around the table to have breakfast.
In China I have visited several community colleges or study centres where a lot of elder people learn and develop their skills in painting, calligraphy, singing and many other subj ects. However, I have not yet seen any study group on how to bring up and stimulate children to become confident, curious, intelligent, open-minded, brave, creative…!
However, ”thinking differently” does not mean an intellectual ”anarchy”, where you are alone in your thinking. On the contrary, the more knowledge, experience and ideas you get from your parents, grandparents and others the more creative can you be. It is the same in school; creativity can flourish

only when you have a stable and broad foundation of knowledge. And creativity will flourish most freely in groups characterized by open-minded thinking, tolerance, curiosity, willingness to share etc.
Do not be a slave under old knowledge…
However, you should not be a slave under old knowledge if you want to be creative. You need to use such knowledge but not to be ruled by it. Being ruled by established knowledge can even be dangerous, as this example from world war two shows:
During that war there were two persons at the American airforce who were recruiting pilots for big bombers. One of them was a psychologist, who was conventional, and the other a retired general who used his own unortodox methods. An evaluation found that many of those pilots that were chosen by the psychologist hade been shot down by the Germans. Those pilots who were recruited by the unortodox general managed on the other hand to survive much more.
Both the psychologist and the general asked the candidates what they would do if their bomber was shot at by German anti-aircraft. The psychologist approved those who answered according to the instruction book, that they would ascend with their bombers, while he disapproved those who answered that they did not know what to do. The general, however, approved those who answered that they did not know what to do while those who answered according to the instruction book failed.
The conclusion was that those who did not blindly follow the instruction book were more creative during moments of danger and therefore had better chances to survive.
The first years are the most crucial…
Parents and grandparents are especially important because the first years, from birth up to about five years old, are the most crucial when it comes to optimal brain development. What is done during those years to stimulate the skills among your children or grandchildren can hardly be overrated. Consequently, education and training of preschool teachers is of outmost importance.
Probably the single most important understanding every teacher – and every parent and grandparent – have to embrace is the crucial role motivation plays; without motivation there will be no creativity and no innovations. However, there are two types of motivation, extrinsic (outer) and intrinsic (inner). Extrinsic motivation comes from outside the person and could be either positive (some kind of reward) or negative (some kind of punishment). Intrinsic motivation comes from inside the person: curiosity, interest, passion…
A lot of studies show that intrinsic, inner, motivation is far more essential for creativity, while extrinsic motivation even could be counterproductive. Extrinsic motivations can easily distract from the actual goals and instead make people focus on the rewards or punishments. Extrinsic motivations can also reduce the willingness to take risks since risk-taking might endanger the expected rewards.
And without risk-takings there will hardly be any audacious creativity…
Schools
Most schools all over the world focus mainly on convergent thinking, that is to think like everybody else or as the authorities. Albert Einstein was for example very critical and said: ”It’s amazing that our educational system doesn’t destroy all curiosity”. He was talking about schools in Europe and US, that is schools which mostly are comparatively liberal. It is even worse with schools in countries and communities which are dominated by convergent thinking, religiously or politically.
In order to promote creativity schools and teachers have to give priority to freethinking over repeating and dogma. Teachers have to help their pupils and students to cultivate their natural curiosity.
Teachers must be convinced that every student has the potential to be creative and the teachers have to know how to promote creativity and – even more important – what not to do. It is necessary to create good conditions for students to talk about what they are studying, to discuss, reason, reflect together etc. For example, discussions can not take place only in big classes. Instead, now and then during the day, big classes have to be split up into small groups to make it possible for every single student to be active in discussions every single day in school.
However, teachers must never loose sight of the importance of knowledge and skills. Students can only have serious discussions and be truly creative when they have well-founded basis of broad knowledge and skills – deeply rooted in their own culture.
Creating a school system where creativity and freethinking can flourish requires a series of measures:
– Teacher training must be reformed. First of all, education has to be learner-centred and the role of the teacher has to be shifted from the source of knowledge, whose authority cannot be challenged, to the facilitator of more independent learning.
– Teachers in schools need to get further training through courses, seminars and study circles according to the new teacher training. Teachers need for example to learn how to promote and stimulate creativity and how not to hamper their students.
– Teachers should be masters in creating good conditions for group work, where creativity can flourish in the meeting of various ideas, experiences, attitudes etc… By the way, group work is something that is needed in every modern company nowadays.
– Teachers need to be independent of textbooks, so they can use them creatively and with a lot of flexibility. Often other resources are more useful, such as ordinary books, newspapers, journals, Internet etc.
Above all, schools and teachers need to be very clear about their ultimate aim. Is it to teach the students to do what their teachers want them to do or is it to prepare them for a future about which schools and teachers have very vague ideas and practically no knowledge?
I have visited several schools in China and it is common with appeals on the walls such as ”Study hard make progress everyday”. I wonder when I will see a slogan like ”Think differently!”…
Examination system
However, no matter what will be done in schools in order to promote creativity and freethinking, that will have little effect if the examination for higher education does not support these qualities. As long as there is a hard competition to higher education students will prepare themselves for such examinations. And if they only test the ability to remember and repeat then the students will only focus on such skills.
There are of course basic knowledge and skills that you need in order to get into higher education and in order to manage in society, such as skills in English. Any examination system must include such skills,
but besides from those what you have to learn is the skill to think and that has to be the main focus for any kind of instrument of selection.
By the way, there are a couple of disastrous side effects of a crucial examination system that only or mainly focus on repetitive knowledge. One is that all those who do not pass the examination test will finish school with very little that could be of use for their future life, because most of what they studied in school was targeted only on the examination to higher studies. What waste of time and resources!
Another negative side effect is that some of those truly creatively gifted students will not pass the examination test – simply because they find it too tedious to prepare for boring and unexiting tests and for that reason never make it into universities.
Combine examination with lottery?
If you want to promote creativity you need an examination system that not only test the student’s ability to remember but also their ability to perform divergent thinking, that is not to think like everybody else or like the authorities. You also need an system which does not recuire the students to spend all their time preparing for the exame – when will they otherwise have time to develop all other skills that are necessary or important for them to become good citizens?
A possible alternative could be to create a selection system in two steps: examination plus lottery.
Step 1: Every student, who have passed upper secondary school, will be able to take part in an examination that tests basic knowledge and skills that are presumed to be necessary for higher education and more advanced studies: language and communication skills, English, logical thinking, the abilitity to perform divergent thinking etc… The examination should only test such basic knowledges and skills. After all, it is almost impossible to choose what other knowledge should be tested when noone actually knows the future value of such knowledge.
The test results in two groups only, those who pass the test and those who do not. If you pass you are qualified to apply for university studies.
Step 2: The application to specific courses at universities or university colleges. When there are more applicants than admission places, then the university arrange a lottery that results in ”winners” and ”losers”.
Those who pass the test in step 1, but fail to enter the preferred university, because they drew a blank in the lottery, of course should have the possibility to try their luck at other universities or later.
With such a system there is only a certain amount of repetitive knowledge and skills that the students need to learn – enough to pass the examination in step 1. When the schools have taught those basic knowledge and skills, then there will be time for teachers and students to focus on quality, creativity, group work etc. Such a system will free the teachers from the pressure of only mediating already acknowledged knowledge so they instead can explore new possibilities and understandings together with their students and in that way be creative themselves.
And – as an extra bonus – such an education system would considerably increase the chances for gifted people to get Nobel Prizes…
What you can do yourself…
Parents, grandparents and schools are important but they are not as important as you yourself are in promoting your own creativity. My first and most important advice, if you want to boost you creativity, is to give up television. Television functions almost like drugs, it might make you believe you are creative and learning – but what it actually is doing is softening your brain. So, do not watch TV!
Instead read books! Different kinds of books. Choose interesting and exciting books and skip the boring ones. Take it as a challenge to try books about topics you have never thought about before.
If you have not done it yet, start exploring the vast resources of ”podcasts” on Internet. There are countless numbers of exciting lectures, radio programmes, lessons etc for free, which you can download to your computer and to your iPod. Listen to them while you are walking and exercising your body, which by the way is good also for your brain…
That presumes you are curious and curiosity is maybe the most valuable quality among human beings. Remember how curious you were as a child; you do not have to be less curious just because you grow old. Remember, every human being has been able to observe that apples fall to the ground, but only Newton asked himself the obvious question ”Why do apples fall…?”
Take it as a habit always to carry a notebook with you. Writing down your ideas and thoughts makes it much easier to remember them later – so much easier you probably seldom need to actually read what you wrote.
Exercise your brain in many different ways: Talk to people, different people, especially those who have other background, experiences and ideas than you. Take different routes when you walk to your school or your job. Use your left hand if you are right-handed and vice versa. Etc…
Discuss, read etc with an open mind. Of course, other people are probably less intelligent than you – but yet they might have got ideas and reached conclusions that are worth considering…

lecture: the comprehensive application of library resource

steps in research:
1. analysis project and identify the keywords/concepts
2. advance keywords (by boolean op)
3. choose database
4. search strategy
5. analysis the results
6. get the full text

step1 or 2:
*pay attention the acronyms and synonyms!!! by dictionary or enclopedia
or other search engines

step 3: most frequently used
Elsevier/CNKI
EBSCO-ASP/wanfang
proquest science journal
springerlink
blackwell/john willey
IEEE

catchword/.. material/physics/chemistry related

SCI- most advanced results!

step 6: email the author to get the fulltext
google scholar/scirus
OA 期刊

Hacking Knowledge: 77 Ways to Learn Faster, Deeper, and Better zz

If someone granted you one wish, what do you imagine you would want out of life that you haven't gotten yet? For many people, it would be self-improvement and knowledge. New knowledge is the backbone of society's progress. Great thinkers such as Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Edison, Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein, and others' quests for knowledge have led society to many of the marvels we enjoy today. Your quest for knowledge doesn't have to be as Earth-changing as Einstein's, but it can be an important part of your life, leading to a new job, better pay, a new hobby, or simply knowledge for knowledge's sake — whatever is important to you as an end goal.

Life-changing knowledge does typically require advanced learning techniques. In fact, it's been said that the average adult only uses 10% of his/her brain. Imagine what we may be capable of with more advanced learning techniques. Here are 77 tips related to knowledge and learning to help you on your quest. A few are specifically for students in traditional learning institutions; the rest for self-starters, or those learning on their own. Happy learning.

Health

  1. Shake a leg. Lack of blood flow is a common reason for lack of concentration. If you've been sitting in one place for awhile, bounce one of your legs for a minute or two. It gets your blood flowing and sharpens both concentration and recall.
  2. Food for thought: Eat breakfast. A lot of people skip breakfast, but creativity is often optimal in the early morning and it helps to have some protein in you to feed your brain. A lack of protein can actually cause headaches.
  3. Food for thought, part 2: Eat a light lunch. Heavy lunches have a tendency to make people drowsy. While you could turn this to your advantage by taking a "thinking nap" (see #23), most people haven't learned how.
  4. Cognitive enhancers: Ginkgo biloba. Ginkgo biloba is a natural supplement that has been used in China and other countries for centuries and has been reputed to reverse memory loss in rats. It's also suggested by some health practitioners as a nootrope and thus a memory enhancer.
  5. Reduce stress + depresssion. Stress and depression may reduce the ability to recall information and thus inhibit learning. Sometimes, all you need to reduce depression is more white light and fewer refined foods.

Balance

  1. Sleep on it. Dr. Maxwell Maltz wrote about in his book Psycho-Cybernetics about a man who was was paid good money to come up with ideas. He would lock his office door, close the blinds, turn off the lights. He'd focus on the problem at hand, then take a short nap on a couch. When he awoke, he usually had the problem solved.
  2. Take a break. Change phyical or mental perspective to lighten the invisible stress that can sometimes occur when you sit in one place too long, focused on learning. Taking a 5-15 minute break every hour during study sessions is more beneficial than non-stop study. It gives your mind time to relax and absorb information. If you want to get really serious with breaks, try a 20 minute ultradian break as part of every 90 minute cycle. This includes a nap break, which is for a different purpose than #23.
  3. Take a hike. Changing your perspective often relieves tension, thus freeing your creative mind. Taking a short walk around the neighborhood may help.
  4. Change your focus. Sometimes there simply isn't enough time to take a long break. If so, change subject focus. Alternate between technical and non-technical subjects.

Perspective and Focus

  1. Change your focus, part 2. There are three primary ways to learn: visual, kinesthetic, and auditory. If one isn't working for you, try another.
  2. Do walking meditation. If you're taking a hike (#25), go one step further and learn walking meditation as a way to tap into your inner resources and your strengthen your ability to focus. Just make sure you're not walking inadvertently into traffic.
  3. Focus and immerse yourself. Focus on whatever you're studying. Don't try to watch TV at the same time or worry yourself about other things. Anxiety does not make for absorption of information and ideas.
  4. Turn out the lights. This is a way to focus, if you are not into meditating. Sit in the dark, block out extraneous influences. This is ideal for learning kinesthetically, such as guitar chord changes.
  5. Take a bath or shower. Both activities loosen you up, making your mind more receptive to recognizing brilliant ideas.

Recall Techniques

  1. Listen to music. Researchers have long shown that certain types of music are a great "key" for recalling memories. Information learned while listening to a particular song or collection can often be recalled simply by "playing" the songs mentally.
  2. Speedread. Some people believe that speedreading causes you to miss vital information. The fact remains that efficient speedreading results in filtering out irrelevant information. If necessary, you can always read and re-read at slower speeds. Slow reading actually hinders the ability to absorb general ideas. (Although technical subjects often requirer slower reading.) If you're reading online, you can try the free Spreeder Web-based application.
  3. Use acronyms and other mnemonic devices. Mnemonics are essentially tricks for remembering information. Some tricks are so effective that proper application will let you recall loads of mundane information years later.

Visual Aids

  1. Every picture tells a story. Draw or sketch whatever it is you are trying to achieve. Having a concrete goal in mind helps you progress towards that goal.
  2. Brainmap it. Need to plan something? Brain maps, or mind maps, offer a compact way to get both an overview of a project as well as easily add details. With mind maps, you can see the relationships between disparate ideas and they can also act as a receptacle for a brainstorming session.
  3. Learn symbolism and semiotics. Semiotics is the study of signs and symbols. Having an understanding of the symbols of a particular discipline aids in learning, and also allows you to record information more efficiently.
  4. Use information design. When you record information that has an inherent structure, applying information design helps convey that information more clearly. A great resource is Information Aesthetics, which gives examples of information design and links to their sources.
  5. Use visual learning techniques. Try gliffy for structured diagrams. Also see Inspiration.com for an explanation of webs, idea maps, concept maps, and plots.
  6. Map your task flow. Learning often requires gaining knowledge in a specific sequence. Organizing your thoughts on what needs to be done is a powerful way to prepare yourself to complete tasks or learn new topics.

Verbal and Auditory Techniques

  1. Stimulate ideas. Play rhyming games, utter nonsense words. These loosen you up, making you more receptive to learning.
  2. Brainstorm. This is a time-honored technique that combines verbal activity, writing, and collaboration. (One person can brainstorm, but it's more effective in a group.) It's fruitful if you remember some simple rules: Firstly, don't shut anyone's idea out. Secondly, don't "edit" in progress; just record all ideas first, then dissect them later. Participating in brainstorming helps assess what you already know about something, and what you didn't know.
  3. Learn by osmosis. Got an iPod? Record a few of your own podcasts, upload them to your iPod and sleep on it. Literally. Put it under your pillow and playback language lessons or whatever.
  4. Cognitive enhancers: binaural beats. Binaural beats involve playing two close frequencies simultaneously to produce alpha, beta, delta, and theta waves, all of which produce either sleeping, restfulness, relaxation, meditativeness, alertness, or concentration. Binaural beats are used in conjunction with other excercises for a type of super-learning.
  5. Laugh. Laughing relaxes the body. A relaxed body is more receptive to new ideas.

Kinesthetic Techniques

  1. Write, don't type. While typing your notes into the computer is great for posterity, writing by hand stimulates ideas. The simple act of holding and using a pen or pencil massages acupuncture points in the hand, which in turn stimulates ideas.
  2. Carry a quality notebook at all times. Samuel Taylor Coleridge dreamed the words of the poem "In Xanadu (did Kubla Khan)...". Upon awakening, he wrote down what he could recall, but was distracted by a visitor and promptly forgot the rest of the poem. Forever. If you've been doing "walking meditation" or any kind of meditation or productive napping, ideas may suddenly come to you. Record them immediately.
  3. Keep a journal. This isn't exactly the same as a notebook. Journaling has to do with tracking experiences over time. If you add in visual details, charts, brainmaps, etc., you have a much more creative way to keep tabs on what you are learning.
  4. Organize. Use sticky colored tabs to divide up a notebook or journal. They are a great way to partition ideas for easy referral.
  5. Use post-it notes. Post-it notes provide a helpful way to record your thoughts about passages in books without defacing them with ink or pencil marks.

Self-Motivation Techniques

  1. Give yourself credit. Ideas are actually a dime a dozen. If you learn to focus your mind on what results you want to achieve, you'll recognize the good ideas. Your mind will become a filter for them, which will motivate you to learn more.
  2. Motivate yourself. Why do you want to learn something? What do want to achieve through learning? If you don't know why you want to learn, then distractions will be far more enticing.
  3. Set a goal. W. Clement Stone once said "Whatever the mind of man can conceive, it can achieve." It's an amazing phenomenon in goal achievement. Prepare yourself by whatever means necessary, and hurdles will seem surmountable. Anyone who has experienced this phenomenon understands its validity.
  4. Think positive. There's no point in setting learning goals for yourself if you don't have any faith in your ability to learn.
  5. Organize, part 2. Learning is only one facet of the average adult's daily life. You need to organize your time and tasks else you might find it difficult to fit time in for learning. Try Neptune for a browser-based application for "getting things done."
  6. Every skill is learned. With the exception of bodily functions, every skill in life is learned. Generally speaking, if one person can learn something, so can you. It may take you more effort, but if you've set a believable goal, it's likely an achievable goal.
  7. Prepare yourself for learning. Thinking positive isn't sufficient for successfully achieving goals. This is especially important if you are an adult, as you'll probably have many distractions surrounding your daily life. Implement ways to reduce distractions, at least for a few hours at a time, else learning will become a frustrating experience.
  8. Prepare yourself, part 2. Human nature is such that not everyone in your life will be a well-wisher in your self-improvement and learning plans. They may intentionally or subconsciously distract you from your goal. If you have classes to attend after work, make sure that work colleagues know this, that you are unable to work late. Diplomacy works best if you think your boss is intentionally giving you work on the days he/she knows you have to leave. Reschedule lectures to a later time slot if possible/ necessary.
  9. Constrain yourself. Most people need structure in their lives. Freedom is sometimes a scary thing. It's like chaos. But even chaos has order within. By constraining yourself — say giving yourself deadlines, limiting your time on an idea in some manner, or limiting the tools you are working with — you can often accomplish more in less time.

Supplemental Techniques

  1. Read as much as you can. How much more obvious can it get? Use Spreeder (#33) if you have to. Get a breadth of topics as well as depth.
  2. Cross-pollinate your interests. Neurons that connect to existing neurons give you new perspectives and abilities to use additional knowledge in new ways.
  3. Learn another language. New perspectives give you the ability to cross-pollinate cultural concepts and come up with new ideas. As well, sometimes reading a book in its original language will provide you with insights lost in translation.
  4. Learn how to learn. Management Help has a resource page, as does SIAST (Virtual Campus), which links to articles about learning methods. They are geared towards online learning, but no doubt you gain something from them for any type of learning. If you are serious about optimum learning, read Headrush's Crash course in learning theory.
  5. Learn what you know and what you don't. Many people might say, "I'm dumb," or "I don't know anything about that." The fact is, many people are wholly unaware of what they already know about a topic. If you want to learn about a topic, you need to determine what you already know, figure out what you don't know, and then learn the latter.
  6. Multi-task through background processes. Effective multi-tasking allows you to bootstrap limited time to accomplish several tasks. Learning can be bootstrapped through multi-tasking, too. By effective multitasking, I don't mean doing two or more things at exactly the same time. It's not possible. However, you can achieve the semblance of effective multitasking with the right approach, and by prepping your mind for it. For example, a successful freelance writer learns to manage several articles at the same time. Research the first essay, and then let the background processes of your mind takeover. Move on consciously to the second essay. While researching the second essay, the first one will often "write itself." Be prepared to record it when it "appears" to you.
  7. Think holistically. Holistic thinking might be the single most "advanced" learning technique that would help students. But it's a mindset rather than a single technique.
  8. Use the right type of repetition. Complex concepts often require revisting in order to be fully absorbed. Sometimes, for some people, it may actually take months or years. Repetition of concepts and theory with various concrete examples improves absorption and speeds up learning.
  9. Apply the Quantum Learning (QL) model. The Quantum Learning model is being applied in some US schools and goes beyond typical education methods to engage students.
  10. Get necessary tools. There are obviously all kinds of tools for learning. If you are learning online like a growing number of people these days, then consider your online tools. One of the best tools for online research is the Firefox web browser, which has loads of extensions (add-ons) with all manner of useful features. One is Googlepedia, which simultaneously displays Google search engine listings, when you search for a term, with related entries from Wikipedia.
  11. Get necessary tools, part 2. This is a very niche tip, but if you want to learn fast-track methods for building software, read Getting Real from 37 Signals. The Web page version is free. The techniques in the book have been used to create Basecamp, Campfire, and Backpack web applications in a short time frame. Each of these applications support collaboration and organization.
  12. Learn critical thinking. As Keegan-Michael Key's character on MadTV might say, critical thinking takes analysis to "a whole notha level". Read Wikipedia's discourse on critical thinking as a starting point. It involves good analytical skills to aid the ability to learn selectively.
  13. Learn complex problem solving. For most people, life is a series of problems to be solved. Learning is part of the process. If you have a complex problem, you need to learn the art of complex problem solving. [The latter page has some incredible visual information.]

For Teachers, Tutors, and Parents

  1. Be engaging. Lectures are one-sided and often counter-productive. Information merely heard or witnessed (from a chalkboard for instance) is often forgotten. Teaching is not simply talking. Talking isn't enough. Ask students questions, present scenarios, engage them.
  2. Use information pyramids. Learning happens in layers. Build base knowledge upon which you can add advanced concepts.
  3. Use video games. Video games get a bad rap because of certain violent games. But video games in general can often be an effective aid to learning.
  4. Role play. Younger people often learn better by being part of a learning experience. For example, history is easier to absorb through reenactments.
  5. Apply the 80/20 rule. This rule is often interpreted in dfferent ways. In this case, the 80/20 rule means that some concepts, say about 20% of a curriculum, require more effort and time, say about 80%, than others. So be prepared to expand on complex topics.
  6. Tell stories. Venus Flytrap, a character from the sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati, once taught a student gang member about atoms, electrons, and protons by saying that an atom was one big neighborhood, and the protons and neutrons had their own smaller neighborhoods and never mixed. Just like rival gangs. The story worked, and understanding sparked in the students eyes.
  7. Go beyond the public school curriculum. The public school system is woefully lacking in teaching advanced learning and brainstorming methods. It's not that the methods cannot be taught; they just aren't. To learn more, you have to pay a premium in additional time and effort, and sometimes money for commercially available learning tools. There's nothing wrong with that in itself, but what is taught in schools needs to be expanded. This article's author has proven that a nine-year old can learn (some) university level math, if the learning is approached correctly.
  8. Use applied learning. If a high school student were having trouble in math, say with fractions, one example of applied learning might be photography, lenses, f-stops, etc. Another example is cooking and measurement of ingredients. Tailor the applied learning to the interest of the student.

For Students and Self-Studiers

  1. Be engaged. Surprise. Sometimes students are bored because they know more than is being taught, maybe even more than a teacher. (Hopefully teachers will assess what each student already knows.) Students should discuss with a teacher if they feel that the material being covered is not challenging. Also consider asking for additional materials.
  2. Teach yourself. Teachers cannot always change their curricula. If you're not being challenged, challenge yourself. Some countries still apply country-wide exams for all students. If your lecturer didn't cover a topic, you should learn it on your own. Don't wait for someone to teach you. Lectures are most effective when you've pre-introduced yourself to concepts.
  3. Collaborate. If studying by yourself isn't working, maybe a study group will help.
  4. Do unto others: teach something. The best way to learn something better is to teach it to someone else. It forces you to learn, if you are motivated enough to share your knowledge.
  5. Write about it. An effective way to "teach" something is to create an FAQ or a wiki containing everything you know about a topic. Or blog about the topic. Doing so helps you to realize what you know and more importantly what you don't. You don't even have to spend money if you grab a freebie account with Typepad, Wordpress, or Blogger.
  6. Learn by experience. Pretty obvious, right? It means put in the necessary time. An expert is often defined as someone who has put in 10,000 hours into some experience or endeavor. That's approximately 5 years of 40 hours per week, every week. Are you an expert without realizing it? If you're not, do you have the dedication to be an expert?
  7. Quiz yourself. Testing what you've learned will reinforce the information. Flash cards are one of the best ways, and are not just for kids.
  8. Learn the right things first. Learn the basics. Case in point: a frustrating way to learn a new language is to learn grammar and spelling and sentence constructs first. This is not the way a baby learns a language, and there's no reason why an adult or young adult has to start differently, despite "expert" opinion. Try for yourself and see the difference.
  9. Plan your learning. If you have a long-term plan to learn something, then to quote Led Zeppelin, "There are two paths you can go by." You can take a haphazard approach to learning, or you can put in a bit of planning and find an optimum path. Plan your time and balance your learning and living.

Parting Advice

  1. Persist. Don't give up learning in the face of intimdating tasks. Anything one human being can learn, most others can as well. Wasn't it Einstein that said, "Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration"? Thomas Edison said it, too.
  2. Defy the experts. Dyslexia, in a nutshell, is the affliction of mentally jumbling letters and digits, causing difficulties in reading, writing and thus learning. Sometimes spoken words or numbers get mixed up as well. In the past, "experts" declared dyslexic children stupid. Later, they said they were incapable of learning. This author has interacted with and taught dyslexic teens. It's possible. Helen Keller had no experience of sight, sound, or speech, and yet she learned. Conclusion: There is more than one way to learn; never believe you cannot.
  3. Challenge yourself. People are often more intelligent than they realize. In a world that compartmentalizes and categorizes everything, not everyone is sure where they fit in. And genius can be found in many walks of life. If you honestly suspect that there's more to you than has been "allowed" to be let out, try an IQ test such as the one offered by MENSA. It's unlike the standardized IQ tests given in many schools. You know the kind — the ones which traumatize many young students into thinking they are stupid, simply because the tests don't really assess all student's knowledge and learning ability. And the ability to learn is far, far more important than what you already know.
  4. Party before an exam. Well, don't go that far. The key is to relax. The worse thing to do is cram the night before an exam. If you don't already know a subject by then, cramming isn't going to help. If you have studied, simply review the topic, then go do something pleasant (no more studying). Doing so tells your brain that you are prepared and that you will be able to recall anything that you have already learned. On the other hand, if you didn't spend the semester learning the ideas you need, you might as well go party anyways because cramming at the last minute isn't going to help much at that point.
  5. Don't worry; learn happy. Have a real passion for learning and want to share that? Join a group such as the Joyful Jubilant Learning community [via LifeHack].

Sources For This Article

This is only a partial list of sources, focusing only on Web sites. Many of the ideas presented above come from long years of experience, with information gleaned from dozens of books and tapes on learning and, more recently, Web sites. The Web sites below either present original articles related to the ideas above, or summaries of ideas with links to other Web sites. In the latter case, such Web sites have likely been linked above. Book sources have either been long forgotten or mentioned above.

How to Work Effectively for 24 Consecutive Hours zz

Here are a few tips for making the most of your 24-hour shift:

  • Limit Caffeine - though this is normally the first place a person will turn when faced with an extended shift at the office, it’s important to regulate how much caffeine you ingest, especially near the end. Take it from me - I’m one of the biggest fans (and abusers, arguably) of caffeine that I know. Overuse of caffeine will result in the in ability to concentrate, as well as a bad case of the jitters.
  • Snack Regularly (and Sensibly) - one of the most common stops among the third-shifters will be the vending machine in the break room. And because said vending machine rarely offers a variety of healthy snacks, the buyer will typically end up with a candy bar or bag of chips or crackers. While I’m certainly not a health nut or anything (and I’m pretty sure the development of Twix took place under divine supervision), you really ought to go out of your way to find things like fruit and nuts to snack on. You won’t experience the sudden surge of energy provided by a sugary snack, it will help you stay alert and generally on a more even-keel than the alternatives. (It’s worth noting that I have no physiological data or research to support the above claim, just personal experience).
  • Avoid Sleep at All Costs - probably the biggest mistake I made during one of my recent all-nighters was taking a 2-hour nap about 3/4 of the way through. Admittedly, I was nearing the end of my rope when I did it, but in an effort to try to “re-animate” a little by catching some shuteye I all but doomed myself to poor work and general crankiness once I awoke. If you get to the point where you simply cannot keep your eyes open any longer, it may be time to admit defeat and stop working until you can get a full night’s sleep.
  • If You Must Sleep… - if the previous tip won’t work for you and you absolutely must sleep (probably because admitting defeat isn’t an option), try to do so in 15-20 minute increments. Also, I’ve found it helpful to sleep on less-than ideal equipment. Your desk chair is a good example of what I mean. The reason is that if you’re sleeping on a big overstuffed sofa or something, you’re going to have that much more trouble waking and getting back to work. Again, no empirical data in support of this claim, I’ve just found that I work better (and wake more easily) if I nap at my desk instead of on my boss’ plush leather sofa.
  • Music, Music, Music - probably the best way to counteract fatigue (which is all but assured in situations like this) is to keep your toes tapping. Find music that is upbeat, energetic and conducive to the environment you’re trying to create. This will obviously mean different things to different people, but this is the time when having an iPod is absolutely wonderful. Oh, and if you have the means, having an iPhone (which I received for Christmas and absolutely love - more on that later) and the ability to buy new music directly from it is absolutely wonderful (and will probably put me in the poor house, but I digress…). Just as an example, I probably listened to “Infinity on High” by Fall Out Boy and “Elect the Dead” by Serj Tankian about 10-15 times each during the last couple of weeks.
  • Map Out Objectives Before Starting Work - a very GTD-ish notion, but worth pointing out. If it’s 8:00pm and you know you’ll be watching the sunrise from your desk, it’s best to plot out exactly what needs to be done on a sheet of paper and check things off as you complete them. You don’t want to have to count on your barely-functioning brain to tell you what to do next, especially after you’ve been at it for several hours.
Hopefully these shifts are something you don’t have to endure very often, but being able to really nail a project that’s due will make you look like a rock star. Not to mention the priceless look on the faces of those showing up to work in the morning when they realize you’ve been there since *yesterday*.

8 Ways to Take It to the Next Level zz from lifehack

No matter what you’re doing, there comes a time when you are going to want to take things up a notch. Maybe it’s your career — even if things are going along fine right now, ultimately you’d like to get a promotion, increase your client base, or reach a larger audience. Or maybe it’s a hobby that you think you’d like to turn into a career.

Getting started with anything can be a struggle, but once you reach a certain level of success, it can be hard to figure out how to make whatever it is you do truly remarkable. The things we do have a way of developing their own inertia, and if we’re not careful, we get carried along in the routine without ever realizing the full potential of what we and our lives can be.

How can you shake things up a bit? What do you have to do to take your project, your career, your product, or your life to the next level? Read on…

1. Build Your Brand

Long-time readers know that I haven’t always been fond of the idea of personal branding. Consider me convinced.

The strength of your brand is how well you are associated with whatever you do. For instance, lifehack.org offers tips and hacks to increase personal productivity. When people hear the word “lifehack”, they think of personal productivity, and when they hear “personal productivity” they think of lifehack. It’s a pretty strong brand. Some people have equally strong brands: when you hear about permission marketing, chances are you think of Seth Godin.

How strongly is your name linked with what you do? What could you do to link them more strongly? Some things to consider:

  • Traditional marketing: Commercials, print ads, billboards, bus wraps — anything that gets your name and message in people’s faces. There are a few problems, though: people might mistake your message, linking you with the wrong speciality; people tend to tune out a lot of advertising as a survival mechanism; people often respond negatively to blatant branding efforts; it’s quite expensive.
  • Blogging: A blog is a conversation with your audience, and can help build up a loyal following that actually cares about what you do.
  • Word-of-mouth: Hard to create and hard to fake, but very effective. Seek out people with a great deal of influence and focus on convincing them of your value. If Seth Godin wrote on his blog that I was the best web writer he knew of, you can bet that within the day my career would be at the next level (maybe the level after that, even!).

2. Build Your Audience

Make a concerted effort to increase the number of people who know about you. Branding is part of this, but it’s not all of it. Give something away, find a new outlet, tell everyone you meet what you do, hand out cards wherever you go, show up at conferences and exhibitions, go to your kids’ classrooms and talk about what you do (and make it interesting enough that they tell their parents). Make yourself useful so people have a compelling reason to pay attention.

3. Increase Your Output

Give your audience, whoever that is, more of what they expect from you. Double, triple, or septuple your output. If you’re a writer, write twice as much. If you’re an actor, get into more plays. If you’re a filmmaker, pledge to produce four short films this year instead of one. Make a painting a day. Aim to top your sales quotas by 50% every month. Do whatever it takes to make yourself more productive. Learn to do whatever you do in half the time — then halve it again. (Read lifehack.org every day, of course!)

4. Improve Your Output

Make whatever you make twice as well. Improve the quality of your work until people have no choice but to stop and gape. Create benchmarks for your output, and aim to top them every single time. Take classes, read book, follow a mentor, practice twice as much, commit yourself to doing what it takes to master your craft or profession.

5. Expand Your Niche

Do what you do now but with a wider outlook. If you write about dogs, start writing about pets in general. If you sell widgets, get into the widget case business. If you’re a musician, learn how to produce. Think about the people whose needs you aren’t meeting, and figure out how to meet them. Don’t try to create a new niche altogether, just look for ways to complement and leverage the work you’re already doing.

6. Restrict Your Niche

Or, do the opposite. Focus yourself on a narrow part of your niche until you’re the only one doing it. If you write about sports, write about baseball, then write about left-handed pitchers. If you make household appliances, make appliances for college students (and then for left-handed college students, maybe). If you paint landscapes, paint trees. If you do marketing consulting, offer viral marketing techniques that work with teenage boys. Become the person people have to go to when they have very specialized needs, because you’re the only one that does it.

7. Cross-Develop

Figure out how to use what you know in an entirely different way. If you coach little leaguers, write a book about coaching. If you offer one-on-one organization coaching, work with a developer to create home organization software. If you’re a TV camera operator, tutor middle schoolers in video podcasting. Find a new way to challenge yourself and put your knowledge to the test — while developing new knowledge and skills.

8. Expand Your Network

Your audience are the people who buy, read, or otherwise use your product; your network are the people that help you make it, market it, or distribute it. Focus on building strong relationships with a variety of people both in and out of your profession. Don’t try to fake it — strong relationships have to be genuine or they won’t last. Join a social networking site like LinkedIn and work it like mad. Go to trade shows, conferences, and exhibitions and talk to every exhibitor and every presenter. Make a list of 20 people in your field you want to know and email them introductions. Build relationships with your 10 best clients. Build relationships with someone from your top competitors (if that’s legal). Join a professional organization and run for an office.

Obviously these are not all exclusive — you can and sometimes have to do more than one at the same time. And they’re not all necessary — some even contradict others. But all of them shake up your routines and make people pay attention to you, whether those people are potential clients, potential customers, or potential partners.

None of these are keys to instant success. All of them require hard work and time to show any effect. If you’re ready to take it to the next level — and you’re ready to put in the work and commitment that entails — then go through the list and ask yourself how each item could help get you there.

Where You Are Depends on How You Look at Things - zz from lifehack

One of the big differences between people who are successful in life and business and people who aren’t is how they look at things, which in turn shapes how they make decisions. If you aren’t satisfied with your progress up the corporate ladder, the value of your investment portfolio or your ability to find a partner you might have more success by altering how you look at things and therefore how you decide to act.

To show how we look at things, and the difference it makes, here are a couple of situations where you might look at things in a new way. Read the full story to see multiple ways of looking at the same things.

At a bedroom, linen, and kitchen store, packages of six low-energy fluorescent bulbs are hanging near the checkout for last-minute sale to shoppers. The concept of being green has proliferated in recent years so the shopper, Susan, reaches up and takes a couple of the packages. She is happy with herself for joining the green movement and thinks, “Al Gore would be proud of me.” When unpacking the bulbs at home Susan has a ‘light bulb moment’ and realizes these energy saving bulbs are packaged in energy wasting plastic casing. That might be safe packaging, but what is wrong with the paper boxes of old? Is it that the plastic casing is see-through? Is it that these packages are easier to display? Susan wonders, “Is more energy used to make this packaging than will be saved using the bulbs in it? Maybe this wasn’t such a good green purchase when taken as a whole.”

Brett needs to become more proficient with a piece of software, Photoshop. He purchased it a year ago for hundreds of dollars along with a Getting Started with Photoshop book. He hasn’t opened the book. He’s opened the software but doesn’t understand how to get started. Today Brett is considering taking a class to get cracking and act on his New Year resolution to use what he has. Brett’s investment in the class would be $175 and 8 hours. Getting started seems like a good idea. Brenda, his girlfriend and firecracker analytic, asks a few investigative questions: “Brett, do you have 8 hours to spare? It seems you’re always doing work as it is.” She continues, “Is it possible that you could hire a tutor or power user who could show you one-on-one only the things that you would like to learn about? If so, wouldn’t that take a lot less than 8 hours? And, might it cost less than $175?” Hmmm… Brett never thought of such special education but the cost/value analysis Brenda is offering changes his leaning against taking the class but still to get the start he wants by hiring a tutor (or proficient high school student).

Verizon recently installed FIOS in a small townhouse community. Looking out his window Smitty, a seasoned businessman, did the calculation. There have been 5 guys here for 5 days digging the trench, laying the conduit, and putting things back in the original condition. That’s worth at least $6,000 ($30 per hour, 8 hours per day, 5 days, 5 guys). Then there is all that equipment and materials they brought in worth another $2500, at least. And the tree they killed and are now replacing is another $400. Plus, the installers have to come back on yet another day to run the conduit and hook up to each townhouse. That’s probably another 13 man days worth ($3,120). That totals $12,020. Doesn’t seem like the payback period is too good. When Smitty gets out his calculator that 100 per month x 7 units x 12 months equals $12,600 per year income. That’s 1 year break-even if you don’t consider the back office costs. Plus, and probably more important to Verizon, they now own the channel to these 14 townhouses for new technology installations in the future.

The way we look at things affects the decisions that we make. Watch how you look at things and, if you want to be in a better position whether in your relationships, work, fitness, or money see if you can expand how you look at things. Watch how others look at things. Ask questions of people whose situation you admire and move toward understanding how they look at things.

Key to Innovation: Becoming an Observer zz from lifehack

We all need to innovate to stand out from the crowd. But what is the key to innovation? The answer, or at least an important answer, is becoming an observer. By observing how we and other people do things, we will spot opportunities for improvements. The more we observe, the more opportunities we will find. We can then work to provide solutions for some of the problems. By becoming a good observer, we will recognize the problems before many people do and have first-mover advantage.

Here are some things you can do to innovate through observation:

1. Don’t take things for granted

There are many things which look usual on the surface but have some hidden opportunities behind them. So open your eyes to observe even the seemingly normal things. Observe how you and other people do routines, and discover the details you overlooked.

2. Watch for inconveniences

Inconveniences are clear signs of problems. Are people waiting too long for something? Do they find it difficult to accomplish certain tasks? If you watch for inconveniences, either those experienced by you or by other people, you can easily find opportunities for innovation.

3. Watch for possible gaps

Sometimes we are so accustomed to doing things in a certain way that we can no longer see it as inconvenient. In that case, it is up to your imagination to spot opportunities for improvements. Maybe the current process is already efficient, but you know of some technologies you can use to improve the process even more. The difference between current situation and possible future situation creates a gap for improvement.

4. Follow technology trends

To help you with the previous step, you should closely follow the trends in technology. Familiarize yourself with the latest developments in relevant fields. This way you will expand your horizon of what is possible and make it easier for you to spot possible gaps for improvement.

5. Watch how your competitors work

You can get ideas for innovation not only by observing how people work, but also by observing how your competitors work. Is there something they do well that you can learn from? If yes, then don’t hesitate to take the idea and implement it.

6. Observe different people at different places

To get broader perspective of a problem, you should go to different places and observe how different people do things. By observing people from different backgrounds in different situations, you will see different dimensions of the problem. This way you will come up with better, more complete solutions.

7. Capture every idea

To avoid losing the ideas you get, you should write them down as soon as possible. Otherwise it’s very likely that the ideas will disappear and will never come back. So you should have a capture tool handy wherever you go.

8. Create a master list of problems

By having one central place to collect all the problems you find, you can easily compare one problem to another to find which one is more potential. If you want to, you can also classify the problems to make them easier to browse.

9. Review your master list of problems

Every now and then, you should review your master list of problems to see all the opportunities you have. After reviewing the list, you can take one or two problems to work with. The best problems to take are those which are both painful and solvable.

10. Take action

Eventually, you can take action based on the problem you choose to provide a solution. By becoming a good observer, you will have a head start in coming up with a solution.

zz writing papers -- from mitbbs

最重要的自己总结概括这篇文献到底说了什么,否则就是白读,读的时候好像什么都明白,一合上就什么都不知道,这是读文献的大忌,既浪费时间,最重要的是,没有养成良好的习惯,导致以后不愿意读文献。
1、每次读完文献(不管是细读还是粗读),合上文献后,想想看,文章最重要的take home message是什么,如果不知道,就从abstract, conclusion里找, 并且从discuss里最好确认一下。这样一来,一篇文章就过关了。take home message其实都不会很多, 基本上是一些concepts, 如果你发现你需要记得很多,那往往是没有读到重点。
呵呵,我觉得读一篇reaearch paper,可以先看abstract,然后看看introduction和conclusion,然后再从文章中寻找自己感兴趣的部分,浏览一下就可以了,不需要精读,这样的效率比较高。很多文章其实从introduction就可以看出作者对某个领域的以往的研究成果的综述,作者在该部分进行的参考文献引用往往也值得引起注意,对于一篇好的paper它引用的参考文献往往是业界大牛的成果,值得加入自己的参考文献数据库。
2、扩充知识面的读法,重点读introduction,看人家提出的问题,以及目前的进展。类似的文章,每天读一两篇,一个月内就基本上对这个领域的某个方向有个大概的了解。读好的review(综述)也行,但这样人容易懒惰。
这种方法很好。如果都能找到相关mini-track的顶级期刊、会议的paper,看他们的introduction和conclusion就差不多了。文章的数量其实不用特别多,20-30篇也够了。
3、为了写文章的读法,读文章的时候,尤其是看discussion的时候,看到好的英文句型,最好有意识的记一下,看一下作者是谁,哪篇文章,哪个期刊,这样以后照猫画虎写的时候,效率高些。比自己在那里半天琢磨出一个句子强的多。 当然,读的多,写的多,你需要记得句型就越少。
这个方法我也在用。顶级刊物、会议的paper更值得学习。对于EE的,自然是transactions of IEEE和一些IEEE会议的文章,对于CS或者MIS的看看communications of the ACM、Information systems research等刊物,以及ICIS、夏威夷系统工程会议、AMCIS这些会议的文章会有很大好处,可以学习到非常老练的语言表达和句式,用到自己的paper里面。文章是写得越多越顺手。
亿。下面是我对英文paper写作的一点经验。
1paper而且要合理搭配,要仔细看看大牛的文章。我自己的第一篇英文会议paper,5000字左右,写上去的参考文献有36篇英文期刊、会议文章和相关英文书籍。其实背后的文献阅读量(中文+英文)总共有3倍左右,都是自己检索的,其中多数文章都是按照上面的方法浏览的,只是侧重于看看人家有什么idea,对相关领域的趋势是怎么分析,顺便也学学语言,只有少数20多篇文章是仔细精读的。
2通过阅读优秀paper(是否优秀,要看所在期刊的影响因子),检索其参考文献中对自己有价值的文章是搜集参考文献的一条捷径。
3paper我的paper,最开始的版本号是1.0,最终提交版本的是6.6版。其中5.0以前的版本不堪入目,写得实在很烂。跟老板讨论了许多次以后,6.0版开始有了质的飞跃。现在看来,最后的文章和前面版本的文章是大相径庭的。
4好的会议截稿非常早。例如今年6月在纽约召开的美国控制系统大会,截稿日期是去年的9月初。一般会议的截稿deadline集中在年初1-3月,还有年底9-11月。想参加明年的许多会议,就需要提前半年-1年做好充分准备。
5paper很多都是靠老板指导的。老板真的超好人,多次指导我修正idea,帮我不厌其烦地修改了许多次paper,从逻辑结构到文章层次,从句法到措辞,都有悉心指导。下面有3条非常好的tips,供参考:
  • 12
6稿稿
  • single-blind review单盲法审稿,即作者不知道自己文章的审稿人是谁,但审稿人可以知道作者的身份。比较客观,AMCIS就是这样审稿的。
  • double-blind review双盲法审稿,凡是涉及作者的名字、单位的地方等在审稿时会自动隐藏,即审稿人不知道作者身份,反之亦然。ACM的许多顶级大会、ICIS都是采用这样的审稿方法,更加客观。
  • camera ready paperIn desktop publishing, camera-ready refers to the final state of a publication before it is printed. Historically, the term has meant that the copy is ready to be photographed and turned into plates for offset printing. Increasingly, however, it is possible to print directly from the electronic version, either by sending it to a high-resolution laser printer or to a special device that can generate plates directly from electronic elements rather than from photographs. In these cases, therefore, camera-ready means merely that the document is ready to be printed. 就是这么回事。accept后经过修改的paper,按照出版物要求做完处理就成了camera ready paper,可以进行出版物印刷。
7
  • acceptance rate是衡量一个会议级别的最重要的指标。一般录用率10%左右或者更少的是顶级会议,10-20%左右的是很好的会议,30%左右的是较好的会议,40%以上就是一般的会议了,50%以上的会议就价值一般了。举例:ACM SIGMETRICS 2006大会由密歇根大学举办,一共提交了320多篇paper,最后只有52篇被accepted。ACM SIGMETRICS 2007是由CMU举办,可惜审稿期太长,有4个月,截稿期限也早,最后我也没投成。(也好在没投,当时的paper肯定会是rejection)
  • program committee学术性质很强。看看都是些什么大学的professor,有没有相关领域的牛人。

Make Your Time Top-Heavy

  1. Volume of Work. Put most your work earlier in your schedule. This could mean working all morning while having little to do in the evenings.
  2. Importance of Work. Put your most important tasks first. Do the tasks that have a long-term impact before taking on the minor problems.
  3. Difficulty of Work. Put the hardest tasks first, when you have the most energy. I love writing articles, but it takes a great deal of energy and thought before writing each post. Putting my writing work earlier lets me write when I’m the most energetic.

  1. Daily Basis. Is your work shifted earlier into the morning or late into the night?
  2. Weekly Basis. Are your Monday’s and Tuesday’s busiest, or are you finishing up everything Sunday night?
  3. Long-Term Basis. Are you doing the bulk of work on your goals now, or planning to work harder in the future? If I have a project I expect to take 4 months, I make sure the first two contain the most work.

  1. Start a Morning Ritual. Wake up earlier and plan out a routine for your first hour. This will make sure you can start working right away, instead of fighting off sleepiness for the first few hours.
  2. Set Daily and Weekly Goals. I maintain a weekly and daily to-do list. Both of these lists help me chunk down the infinite number of tasks I have into something more manageable.
  3. Preserve Your Rest Time. I make a commitment to take at least one day off completely each week. Having a guaranteed rest day makes it easier to work hard now.
  4. Find Your Procrastination Items. Pick those things on your to-do list that you are most likely to procrastinate on. Then make sure to get those done first. Finishing the difficult work early on makes life less stressful.
  5. Expect Interruptions. Schedule your week as if you expect unforseen work to be added. This way, if no extra work comes by, you have more time to relax later in the week. If new work does come, you’re prepared.
  6. Set Your Own Hours. You can create more productive days by defining between what hours you will work. If you don’t allow work to expand into your personal time, it becomes easier to work top-heavy days.
  7. Make Realistic To-Do Lists. Whenever I set my daily and weekly goals, I’m careful to only add on an amount I think I can handle. If you don’t believe you can everything done today, you won’t work as hard. Setting a slightly shorter list and finishing early is best.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

陈志武:重新思考“中国奇迹”zz

访谈者:李利明  受访者:陈志武,耶鲁大学金融经济学教授 

仅仅模仿是不够的

李利明:最近各界讨论最多的有几个话题,一 是围绕新《劳动合同法》的争议,二是中国经济正在出现的新一轮国有化,三是在宏观调控中,很多政府机构的行为又退回到强制性的行政手段,包括对一些竞争性 产业的价格上涨进行直接控制。我们希望你能结合自己的调查和思考,谈谈对这些问题的看法。

陈志武:改革开放30年,到今天经济成就很大,这是世人 所见、世所公认的,中国人的勤劳终于有了成效。但是,我们也看到了许多问题,特别是因为体制改革相对滞后,各种问题开始表现出来。也因为过去只顾经济发展 而忽视体制改革,忽视对过去30年经济成功背后的真正原因的研究与认识,在今天的具体政策制定上,极容易做一些搬石头砸自己脚的事情。比如,重新国进民 退,重回强制性行政干预,以各类名义过度征税,强化政府作为投资者和消费者的角色,推出备受争议的新《劳动合同法》,等等。表面看起来这些现象互不相关, 但却都是中国式渐进改革的必然结果,如果再继续下去,可能到哪一天经济倒退了,还不一定知道是怎么回事。

实际上,从改革开放30年的成就和问题中,我们更能理解几年前杨小凯与林毅夫关于“后发劣 势”与“后发优势”的争论。林毅夫的“后发优势”论指的是,后发展国家可以从先发达国家那里很快模仿到技术,不用重复先发达国家走过的弯路。而杨小凯的 “后发劣势”论指的是,正因为后发展国家可以轻便地模仿技术、快速发展经济,所以会缺乏改革自己的制度的动力,结果牺牲了长久繁荣的机会,后发便利反成了 “劣势”。

几年前,人们更多看到的是中国经济的快速增长,所以,那时不少人认同林毅夫的“后发优势”论。但是,现在,我们的确正在经历杨小凯讲的“后发劣势”。我真希望更多人能认识到这一点,以纠正“后发劣势”。

李利明:那么在你看来,中国过去30年经济改革成功的主要原因是什么?

陈志武:过去30年的经济成功,是中国通过“改革”(市场化、民营化)和“开放”充分利用了后发的“优势”所致。

我要强调,仅仅“改革”和“开放”是难以造成这些成就的,因为晚清、民国时期是私有市场经济 (所以,那时不需要做市场化、私有化“改革”),而且也是 “开放”(尽管晚清是被迫 “开放”),可是那时的“改革开放”没有产生这种经济成功。另外,单凭中国人的勤劳也不足以产生这种经济成就,因为不只是今天的中国人才勤劳,晚清、民国 时期的中国人也照样勤劳。如果说今天的成功是因为“人多力量大”使中国成为世界工厂,这也站不住脚,原因是1830年时中国人口占世界的五分之二,而今天 只占五分之一。

客观讲,中国经济成就至少包括两个主因:已成熟的工业技术和有利于自由贸易的世界秩序。这种 发展条件或者说机遇来自于世界,具体讲来自西方,而非源自中国。“改革开放”的贡献在于让中国加入了起源于中国之外的世界潮流,让中国搭上了全球化的便 车。后发之所以有“优势”也在于这种“便车”已经存在。如何理解这点呢?

首先,我们看到,根据英国著名经济史学家安德森·麦迪逊的估算,从公元元年到1880年左 右,世界人均GDP花了1880年时间才增加了一倍。然而,从1880年到2000年,这短短120年里,全球人均GDP就增加了近5倍。也就是说,过去 120年所完成的人均收入增幅,是1880年之前近两千年人类所完成的增幅的5倍。这种发展发生在中国之外,在中国积极加入全球化之前,世界潮流也想把中 国卷入,但中国要么拒绝、要么不情愿地介入。

从19世纪到20世纪,为什么会有这么大的发展?到1880年,工业革命已经过一个多世纪的 发展,全面进入新的高潮,特别是从那以后,电气技术、汽车技术、飞机技术、电话技术相继出现,1940年代后又出现电脑和互联网。工业制造技术越来越成 熟,而交通运输和通信技术的发展使这些技术的跨国移植变得可行。这些发展使世界人均GDP自1880年后飞速增长。这是中国在1978年甫一实行改革开放 即能快速发展的重要前提,没有这种工业革命背景,就不会有中国目前的成就。

李利明:你能否举几个例子。

陈志武:例子太多了。比如,中石油去年的营业额超过 8000亿,利润将近2000亿元人民币,对中国GDP贡献10000亿以上(包括间接贡献)。仔细想一想,中石油对中国GDP的贡献是源自哪里?这 10000亿的产出,在100年以前是不可能有的。换句话说,100年前的晚清政府,不管它有多能干,也不可能出现中石油这样的大企业。据我了解,地下钻 油技术在1859年的美国宾夕法尼亚州发明,而石油行业真正有规模地发展还是1900年后的事。原因主要有几个。第一,汽车业在1900年之后才开始出 现,到了1910、1920年代在美国才有比较快速的发展。如果没有1930年代建设的美国高速公路网络,汽车的普及就不可能。没有汽车的普及,石油的需 求就不可能大。第二,飞机是石油业的另一个推动力量,虽然莱特兄弟第一次试飞成功是在1903年,但航空运输的真正兴起是二战以后的事。

从这个意义上说,即使晚清、民国时期的中国再能干,也不可能出现像中石油这样的大企业。而相 比之下,到1978年中国改革开放的时候,汽车在全球的普及程度已经非常高,国际海运、空运的规模已经非常大,石油行业规模空前,中国很快就出现了中石 油、中石化、中海油等大型能源企业。现在,这三家企业加在一起,对中国GDP的贡献在10%左右。

再比如,电力行业等也是19世纪后发展起来的。简单说,中国GDP的80%以上都来自现代工业和服务业。

李利明:中国经济增长得益于世界发展的大潮流,这一点不会有争议。但是,中国人均GDP从1978年到1998年短短20年间就翻了两倍,这是中国历史和世界历史上所没有的。

陈志武:这当然是很大的成就,值得我们所有中国人自豪、 庆祝。但是,我们也必须看到其背景。从1880年到1978年,世界人均GDP翻了三倍多,而在此期间中国的人均GDP只翻了一倍,这等于是中国把工业革 命带来的发展机会留给了1978年以后。实际上,从1950年到现在,全球人均GDP翻了两倍,而中国人均GDP从1978年到现在也翻了两倍多。也就是 说,全世界人均GDP花了50年才完成的增长,中国只花了30年,中国的速度不是更快吗?表面上,确实是这样。可是,50年前国际秩序和工业技术的发达程 度,跟30年以前中国准备改革开放时的情况,是没法比的。

比如,个人电脑和微软这类软件企业都是在1970年代末、1980年代初才出现,互联网在 1980年代以后出现。这些新技术使生产能力、生产效率大大提高,只要后发国家愿意模仿,越是后加入发展的国家,其追赶的速度就越快。此外,在过去30 年,不仅通讯技术和运输技术使各国的市场范围迅速扩张,而且从美国的里根、英国的撒切尔夫人,到苏联的戈尔巴乔夫,到中国的邓小平,这么多国家同时进行市 场化改革、自由贸易改革,使市场全球化出现突破性进展,这些都加快了中国的追赶速度,肯定比50年前的日本等亚洲国家的赶超速度更快。

不要说中国,就连美国的UPS(联邦快递)公司也一样。UPS是美国最早开展快递业务的物流 公司,1909年在西雅图成立,二战之前虽然有一些发展,但规模不大,可是在过去30年,这家公司的规模突飞猛进,去年的销售额是492亿美元。如果没有 这一期间的全球化和各国市场化改革,UPS的销售额不可能达到这种规模。

从以上情形我们可以看到,第一,从技术发展角度讲,晚清时候的中国不可能出现过去30年这种 经济增长,民国时期也不可能。第二,从国际秩序变迁角度看,情况也如此。1914年之前,全球贸易体系和世界秩序是以海军实力为基础,你没有海军实力,你 就不能发展世际贸易。连当年的跨国公司也要有自己的海军。晚清政府即使想把当时的中国变成世界工厂,也不可能,因为首先要有自己强大的海军。但是二战之 后,新的全球秩序是以规则为主体,今天美国的跨国公司要聘请许多律师,而不需要养庞大的军队。这也就是为什么1978年后,在没有强大海军的情况下,中国 马上就可以开展国际贸易,迅速变为世界工厂。

在讨论过去30年经济增长的时候,我们往往只把注意力集中在中国的纵向发展上,拿今天的中国 跟过去的中国比,这样当然容易看到奇迹。但是,如果把中国过去30年的发展、过去150年的发展放在全世界的大框架做横向比较,并考虑到同期间的科学技术 水平和国际秩序状况,我们会发现,过去30年的发展与其说是中国的奇迹,还不如说是世界带来的奇迹。如果靠模仿也能给中国带来奇迹,那恰恰说明西方过去 500年发展的科学技术和所建立的世界秩序的重要性。

李利明:这就是所谓的“后发优势”了。

陈志武:是的,越是往后实施贸易全球化、资本全球化和科 学技术现代化的国家,在增长速度方面就越有优势。到目前,中国占世界人口五分之一,但对科技创新的贡献、对建立并维系世界秩序的贡献却很少,低于五分之 一,但这些并没妨碍中国利用别人建立的技术和世界秩序发展自己。不过,正因为模仿也能一夜暴富,往往使大家产生错觉,好像体制改革并不重要。他们没有意识 到,模仿对于一个处于发展初期的国家来说的确管用,但自身却很难内生出持续增长的推动力。仅仅模仿是不够的。

国有经济须继续改革

李利明:前些年大家还在强调民营化、“小政府大社会”等理念,但现在似乎朝相反的方向走。

陈志武:前些年大家对产权多元化、对国家在经济中的定位 的认识很到位,但是,正如刚才讲的,以模仿为主线的“后发优势”实在太强,特别是在2001年加入WTO之后,中国国有与民营的企业都在增长,于是,一些 人开始感到资产由谁所有不重要了,国家相对于社会、相对于私人的界限在哪里也不重要了。我必须强调,如果只是靠模仿、靠出口制造来增长经济,国有企业或许 也行,过去这些年的现实表现可能也是如此。但是,中国的经济增长不能再依赖出口市场带动了,实际上今后的出口市场空间也不可能像以前那样无限地拓展了,必 须靠内需、靠内生的增长动力。民营经济得不到更快发展,将抑制中国内需的增长。在中国经济仍然以国有制为主体的情况下,增长的结果是,国家越来越富,而老 百姓没有足够地分享改革开放的成果,这不仅抑制内需增长,而且扭曲产业结构。

李利明:目前比较流行的一种说法是,应该通过增加分红的方式,减少国有企业掌握的资源,你是怎么看待这个观点的?

陈志武:这有一定的道理。因为把更多的钱从中石油、中石 化、中移动这些企业转移到财政部,至少可以限制这些企业在许多相关、不相关行业里盲目扩张,去抢占本来属于民间的收入增长机会。但是,这样做不能从根本上 解决问题。把国有企业的收入通过分红转移到财政部,财政部怎么花?用什么机制去监督它?只有进一步推进民营化改革,只有让中国公民从资产增值和资产收入中 分享到好处,才能改变目前内需增长不足的局面。

李利明:在经济快速增长的时候进行民营化改革,是否行得通?

陈志武:为了中国的长久持续发展,这种改革是十分必要的。实际上,现实压力也要求进一步推进这种改革。

第一,由于美国次级按揭贷款问题可能使美国和全球经济出现萧条,这对高度依赖出口市场的中国 经济会有较大的负面影响。为了保证国内的就业和收入增长,必须想办法刺激内需的增长。就像1998年的住房市场化改革和住房按揭贷款的推出从根本上刺激了 中国经济增长、使中国从亚洲金融危机中顺利走出来一样,现在如果加快民营化改革、使中国公民真正分享到国有企业改革的好处,必将刺激中国经济的内需,也将 进一步带动新的产业高潮。

第二,中国的产业结构也必须转型,如今是重型制造业太重,服务业太轻。以前苏联为例,在国有 计划经济下,苏联经济也曾经增长很快,只是它增长的是制造业和军工,而不是服务业。当资产增值和资产收入的绝大部分都属于国家、并由国有企业和政府机构去 花费时,他们当然更喜欢看得见、摸得着的制造业和重化工业。国有经济支持的是一种产业结构,民营经济支持的是另一种产业结构。谁可以决定钱怎么花,谁就最 终决定产业结构。

第三,国有经济分量过高,对法治建设会形成某种威胁。根据对几十个国家的情况做的研究,我发 现,一些国家国有经济的比重越高,它的法治水平就越差。为什么会是这样?民营企业界的人对这一点可能有很强的感受,因为任何行业只要有国有企业介入,那个 行业就很难平等竞争,遇有法律纠纷,有关部门甚至会直接跟法院打招呼,要他们注意保护国有资产。

《劳动合同法》是“后发劣势”的具体表现

李利明:当年建立国有经济,主要是基于让人民共同富裕的理想。现在如果进一步推进国有资产多元化,今后国家如何为社会提供医疗卫生、教育等公共服务呢?

陈志武:这中间有很多误区,甚至是误导。首先,我要强调,1950年代将私有财产和私有土地进行全面国有化的时候,我们对老百姓有这样的许诺:你把你的土地和财产都归公,但你今后的工作、生活、医疗、养老、教育等等都由国家包了。这是一种对称的交易。

那么,在当前这种情况下,中国公民是否得到很多福利呢?我们可以看看政府在医疗卫生、社会保 障和就业福利上的开支。据财政部长谢旭人介绍,2007年在这三项上的总开支约6000亿元,相当于财政总开支的15%,为全年GDP的2.4%,分到 13亿人身上,人均461元 (相当于一个普通工人一年收入的3%)。而在国有经济比重并不高的美国,去年在同样三项上的开支约为15000亿美元,相当于联邦政府总开支的61%,为 美国GDP的11.5%,分到3亿美国人身上,人均5000美元(相当于一个普通美国人年收入的六分之一)。

不管按绝对数字算,还是按相对水平,美国政府回馈给老百姓的医疗与社会保障都远高于中国,尽管美国是十足的市场经济。

许多人说,中国还处于初级发展阶段,所以没法跟美国以及其他市场经济国家比。这种说法站不住 脚。美国去年的财政税收占GDP的18%,而中国5.1万亿元财政收入占GDP的20%。所以,即使不算国企收入和国有资产增值,仅财政税收,中国政府的 相对收入就高于美国,在民生上的开支没有理由低于美国。

这又回到了“后发劣势”的问题。财政预算的逻辑到底是什么?是不是有些地方应该多花,有些方 面要少花?是不是该把更多的钱从行政开支以及其他浪费性开支中转移到老百姓的福利上,提供更多的社会保障、医疗保障、教育投入?由于增长来得太容易,所 以,我们对权力的制约和监督、对财政预算的制约和监督,在很多方面还付之阙如。公平与公正,只有在相配的权力制约机制下才可能得到保证。

李利明:你上面提到的这些与 《劳动合同法》有什么关系?

陈志武:把民生责任推回给民间自己以后,普通大众的生活安全靠什么呢?这就引出来一些问题,“后发劣势”就表现出了。本来,应该通过宪政改革强化国家对民生的责任,但这条路难度较大,所以,就有了新《劳动合同法》这条更容易走的捷径。

这部法律的初衷是要保护劳动者的权益,这当然非常好。但是,其中有很多条款是把政府没有尽到 的社会保障责任推到企业身上。比如,在与一些参与起草《劳动合同法》的专家讨论中了解到,之所以规定任何人在一个雇用单位工作10年以上即为终身职员,是 怕35岁或更年长的人如果被解雇就会再找不到工作,在没有社会保障和失业保障的情况下,可能会有太多的人到中年后没工作,从而变成社会负担。所以,他们规 定工作10年以上就不能再被解雇。另外还有,企业与员工签约两次以后就不能再解雇员工,所有劳动关系都必须有劳动合同,超过一年无合同就自然认定雇员为终 身雇员,如此等等,初衷都是要保护劳动者的权益。

但是,这样做的实际效果有可能适得其反。第一,受害最大的是有技能的工人、中产阶层和大学毕 业生,因为农民工流动性很大,10年对他们来说太久,两次签约可能已经正好,而那些真正水平高、有特殊技能的人才又不会在乎有没有铁饭碗,他们到哪里都有 人要。对于那些受过大学教育但没有什么特殊技能的人,可能在工作时间快到10年前被解雇。第二,过去30年中国经济之所以增长这么快,很重要的原因是中国 巨大的便宜劳动力供给,也因为劳动力市场变得越来越自由。而新的《劳动合同法》使中国劳动力市场的交易成本大大增加,将加快全球制造业向其他国家转移,从 而导致中国核心竞争优势的丧失,对中国经济产生根本性的冲击。第三,很多用人单位在雇人方面会变得非常谨慎,能少雇人就少雇。所以,今后的整体就业水平会 更难上升,特别是对大学毕业生的就业影响会很大。

有一点值得一说,那就是,并非没有劳动合同、没有劳动合同法,劳动者的权益就必然受到随便侵 犯。在美国,比如我所在的康州,一般的企业都没有劳动合同,雇佣关系是随意的(employmentatwill),也就是说,雇主在任何时候解雇人都可 以。这听起来好像劳动者权益被随意侵犯,但实际情况正相反,因为解雇人是件很严肃的事,虽然你可以随意解雇员工,但你还得考虑到,如果你随便解雇人,其他 的雇员是否会有安全感呢?事实上,在我所看到、了解到的美国企业里,没有随意解雇人的,反而是想尽办法把人留住,美国劳动者的工作环境就是这样一步步改进 的。反倒是限制性过度的劳动法会阻碍整体就业机会的增长,让更多人没有工作。

我之所以举这个例子,就是因为《劳动合同法》的出台是“后发劣势”的一种具体表现。由于配套 制度改革的迟滞,到今天,虽然我们的财政税收占GDP比重比美国高,虽然我们有这么多国有资产和公有土地,但是却没有到位的社会保障、失业福利、医疗保 障、教育福利,到最后就希望通过《劳动合同法》把一些责任推到用人单位身上。立法者可能没想到,转嫁的结果是把中国更多的就业机会往别的国家送。 (本文来源:中国经济网 作者:陈志武 李利明)