The Process of Choice
Have you ever googled “What should I have for dinner?” or “What should I wear?” or “What should I do tomorrow?” or asked if you should buy a book or a record or save your money? What to hang on your bedroom wall? We’re always making choices and we don’t give any thought to how we make these decisions.
Solving problems in our person-made environment may be more difficult , but eh way we go about it—the process—is not that different from the way we tackle the choices we make every day. Perhaps if we better understood this process, we’d feel more confident, more able to work on these problems.
But you don’t care about any of that. You’re here for the pics—and this 5-volume book is loaded with graphic acrobatics and visual dynamics by Stephan Geissbuhler. It’ll help you understand how to make decisions and it looks great while doing it.
Weirdly rare. There are more than a few copies in libraries, but there are hardly any references to this on the Internet and no copies for sale.
- Authors: Alan Levy with Stephan Geissbuhler + William Chapman, Alicia McGinley, and Richard Saul Wurman
- Introduction: Alan Powers
- Size: 12 × 9.375 inches
- Pages: 5 volumes: 8 + 56 + 36 + 40 + 32
- Binding: 5 stapled pamphlets in a paper slipcase
- Condition: All the booklets are in very good condition with minor discoloration, especially at the spines. The paper slipcase is very worn and fragile with tears ad the joints.
- Publisher: MIT Press and The Group for Environmental Education, 1973