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Journalist, novelist, music critic, pianist, sportsman - it has taken Fraser Beath McEwing the experience of a lifetime to answer this question: What is it that directs all living creatures to behave the way they do? He calls it Mind Architecture, and it adds another chapter in the ongoing quest to understand evolution. Where did this information come from? That's a story in itself, something that is innate in all of us, yet not widely understood or exploited to our benefit. Easy to read, yet profound in its message, Why Does My Dog Bark? explains the powerful force behind behaviour and how to deal with it. We are all philosophers.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Journalist, novelist, music critic, pianist, sportsman - it has taken Fraser Beath McEwing the experience of a lifetime to answer this question: What is it that directs all living creatures to behave the way they do? He calls it Mind Architecture, and it adds another chapter in the ongoing quest to understand evolution. Where did this information come from? That's a story in itself, something that is innate in all of us, yet not widely understood or exploited to our benefit. Easy to read, yet profound in its message, Why Does My Dog Bark? explains the powerful force behind behaviour and how to deal with it. We are all philosophers.
Autorenporträt
A writer and magazine editor for most of his career, Fraser Beath McEwing has been published in many leading Australian magazines and newspapers. His experience in the Melbourne textile industry led him to become managing editor of Rupert Murdoch's Australian Fashion News. In 1972, he founded his own Australian fortnightly fashion industry newspaper, Ragtrader, and ran it for 20 years. Fraser Beath McEwing is also a fiction writer. His first novel, Feel the Width, was published in 1994. It took a satirical look at the Australian fashion industry of the 1960s. His experience in the early 1990s with network marketing formed the basis of his second satirical novel, cafe. His current trilogy, Adam Exx, delves into speculative fiction. In addition to being a writer, Fraser has been a textile wholesaler, furniture importer and retailer, a champion squash player, a competition tennis player and a pianist. From 2012 he became a classical music concert reviewer for the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, and has built up a wide audience. He is a board member of the Theme & Variations Foundation that assists young Australian pianists achieve their goals.