📚 4 Books mentioned in "How Much Personal Space Do You Need? | No Stupid Questions | Episode 159" of No Stupid Questions

Podcast: No Stupid Questions
Episode: How Much Personal Space Do You Need? | No Stupid Questions | Episode 159
Published on August 21, 2023
Here’s a list of all the books mentioned in this episode. Click on the links to watch specific excerpts on YouTube and feel free to purchase the books if they caught your interest!

Dare to Lead
Buy Dare to Lead by Brené Brown on Amazon
In her 2018 book, Dare to Lead, Brown writes that she first heard the phrase clear is kind, unclear is unkind at a 12-step meeting.
During the discussion, it's noted that the phrase 'clarity is kindness,' mentioned by Mike, originates from Brené Brown's book "Dare to Lead."

The Hidden Dimension
Buy The Hidden Dimension by Edward Twitchell Hall on Amazon
This was a psychologist named Edward Hall who published this book called The Hidden Dimension on human personal space, and that was in 1966.
In this segment, Angela introduces "The Hidden Dimension" by Edward Hall, describing it as an important work on the concept of human personal space, originally published in 1966.

The Hidden Dimension
Buy The Hidden Dimension by Edward Twitchell Hall on Amazon
Angela was likely thinking of Hall's contemporary, Heini Hediger, also known as the father of zoo biology, who was influential on Hall's thinking and whose work Hall discusses in The Hidden Dimension.
Angela references Hall's influential book, "The Hidden Dimension," to clarify its discussion of Heini Hediger's work, who is notable in the field of zoo biology.

The Spaces Between Us
Buy The Spaces Between Us by Michael Graziano on Amazon
Like it was annoying, and the more recent research, it's so interesting; there is a Princeton neuroscientist named Michael Graziano and he wrote this book called The Spaces Between Us: A Story of Neuroscience, Evolution, and Human Nature.
In a discussion about the neuroscience of personal space, Angela refers to a book titled "The Spaces Between Us: A Story of Neuroscience, Evolution, and Human Nature" by Princeton neuroscientist Michael Graziano.