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This book may not change your life. But if you have a tendency to be messy and have already broken your new year resolutions to be neater in future, it will certainly make you feel better about your natural inclinations. Untidiness, hoarding, procrastination and improvisation are not bad habits, the authors argue, but often more sensible than meticulous planning, storage and purging of possessions.
That is because the tidiness lobby counts the benefits of neatness, but not its costs. A rough storage system (important papers close to the keyboard, the rest distributed in loosely related piles on every flat surface) takes very little time to manage. Filing every bit of paper in a precise category, with colour-coded index tabs and a neat system of cross-referencing, will certainly take longer. And by the end, it may not save any time. Your reviewer's office is easily the most untidy in The Economist (not entirely his own work, it should be said, thanks to the heroic efforts of his even untidier office-mate). But when it comes to managing information, there seems to be no discernible difference in the end result.
The authors of this book trawl the furthest reaches of psychology, management studies, biology and physics to show why a bit of disorder is good for you. Chiefly, it creates much more room for coincidence and serendipity. Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin because he was notoriously untidy, and didn't clean a Petri dish, thus allowing fungal spores to get to work on bacteria. He remarked wryly on visiting a colleague's spotless lab: 'no danger of mould here'.
It can also help make sense of things. Hearing depends on random movement of molecules: when they coincide with sounds from outside, they are strong enough to stimulate the inner ear. A bit of background noise on the phone enables our ears to filter out echoes. A slightly mushy photograph can be easier to understand. Music and art depend on mess.
Procrastination makes sense too. America’s Marine Corps, the authors repeat (several times), never makes detailed plans in advance. Leaving important things to the last minute reduces the risk of wasting time on things that may ultimately prove not important at all.
The authors are witheringly contemptuous of the bogus equation of tidiness and morality—for example in corporate 'clean desk' policies. Disorder and creativity are so closely linked that any employer who penalizes the first sacrifices the second, they argue. America's professional organizers, a thriving and lucrative cult of tidiness coaches, are merchants of guilt, not productivity boosters.
It's all fine, up to a point. But the book has two weaknesses. One is that it overstates the case. The case for tidiness in some environments—surgery, a dinner table or income tax returns—is really overwhelming. The other is that the book is a bit repetitive and disorganized. Even readers who love mess in their own lives don't necessarily like it in others.
Paraphrase the sentence 'the tidiness lobby counts the benefits of neatness, but not its costs'. (para. 2)

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People generally believe that neatness is a good habit. But ......

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听力原文:F: Good morning, Emperor Hotel, Conference Center. Can I help you?M: Hello, this is Jerald Seward from MSU. We are going to bold an international symposium on global business at the end of this month and we want to book some conference rooms.F: No problem. Just a moment, I need to write down some details. Your name, please?M: Jerald Seward. That's J-E-R-A-L-D Seward, S-E-W-A-R-D. The contact number is 9643-74961.F: When exactly do you want to book?M: January 29th to 31st, three days.F: OK, what kind of rooms do you want?M: Well, we have about 230 participants. I think we need four mid-sized rooms with multi-media equipment. Each room can hold 50 to 60 people.F: I am sorry, we only have three mid-sized rooms available at that time. But we have a big one which can hold 100 people.M: Well, since there is no enough room, that will be OK. By the way, how do you charge?F: It's $300 for mid-sized rooms and $400 for the big one per day. If you have the membership, we can give you a 20% discount.M: Oh, yes, we do have the membership. So that would be $240 for a mid-sized room and $320 for a big room per day. Does that include tea, coffee, and snacks?F: No, you have to pay extra for that. $10 per person each day if you want that.M: Oh, no, I think I'll save that. Can you transfer payment from our account?F: Sure, is your account number still MH52775-3218M: That's right. Thank you, bye.? Look at the notes below.? Some information is missing.? You will hear a man calling to book conference rooms.? For each question 9-15, fill in the missing information in the numbered space using a word, numbers or letters.? You will hear the conversation twice.Emperor Hotel Conference CenterReservation FormTYPE OF ROOM BOOKED: (9) three ______ rooms and one big roomDATE OF CONFERENCE: (10) January ______NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: (11) about ______ peopleDISCOUNT: (12) ______%TOTAL PRICE PER DAY: (13) $ ______CONTACT NAME: (14) ______ SewardACCOUNT NUMBER: (15) ______ -3218(9)