The Luck Factor rips apart the notion that luck is something that just happens. Dr. Wiseman reports on over three years of scientific inquiry into what is often considered the most unscientific topic of all. Dr. Wiseman suggests another reason for the lack of scientific research into luck:
” The situation is akin to the old story of the man who knows he dropped some treasure in one part of the street but searches in another part because the light is better there.”
Dr. Wiseman’s central thesis is that luck can be predicted and therefore controlled. He offers four “principles of luck”, then explains how we can harness these principles to live luckier lives. The four principles are:
Maximize your chance opportunities
Listen to your lucky hunches
Expect good fortune
Turn bad luck into good
The Luck Factor is everything that a psychology book should be.
It details research conducted by the author, as well as research from numerous other psychologists. Many of the experiments Dr. Wiseman referenced were already familiar to me, as I had referenced them in my own book, Climb your Stairway to Heaven: the 9 habits of maximum happiness.
At the same time, Dr. Wiseman makes the psychological research completely accessible to the average reader, both through the use of plain language and by making his points through quizzes and visual puzzles.
I give this book a rare ten out of ten, and predict it could be the best self-help/psychology book of 2003. I can’t think of any reason not to buy this book immediately.
The Luck Factor rips apart the notion that luck is something that just happens. Dr. Wiseman suggests another reason for the lack of scientific research into luck:
Dr. Wiseman’s central thesis is that luck can be predicted and therefore controlled.