Workbook for Volume 1 – Part II – Epilogue: Page 1
For new readers: Please read the “Pinned Post” at the top of this Substack’s Home Page, and titled Why Use Public Peer-Review to Write a Book? - “See for Yourself”.
For returning readers and subscribers: This post introduces the Revised Version for Volume 1 – Part II – Epilogue: Page 1
Summary:
Epilogue: Page 1 – The first page of the Epilogue places this workbook for Volume 1 – Part II: Making Good Individual Decisions in the context of the Table of Contents for this series of books written in three volumes, and titled “Making Good Decisions”: (i) Volume 1: A Book of Connections in Five Workbooks, (ii) Volume 2: A Book of Collections in Five Handbooks, and (iii) Volume 3: A Book of Illustrations in the form of Reading Notes. Volumes 1 & 2 document how to use “Tools, Checklists & Processes” to make good individual, business, and investment decisions, including the “Template for Reading Research Papers” that readers can use to create their own documentation of what works, or does not work. Volume 3 provides a growing set of Reading Notes that use the “Template for Reading Research Papers” as well as the other “Tools, Checklists & Processes” defined in Volumes 1 & 2 to analyze specific papers, books, or topics suggested by readers. The provision of this material as a public, peer-review writing, editing, and publishing process on Substack seeks to promptly place these “Tools, Checklists & Processes” in the hands of readers, as a decentralized foundation for “Constructive Skepticism” in the making of good individual, business, and investment decisions.
Developing…
”CTRI by Francois Gadenne” writes a business book in three volumes, published serially on Substack for public peer-review. The book connects the dots of life-enhancing practices for the next generation, free of controlling algorithms, based on the lifetime experience of a retirement age entrepreneur, & continuously updated with insights from reading Wealth, Health, & Statistics research papers on behalf of large companies as the co-founder of CTRI.