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Dedicated: The Case for Commitment in an Age of Infinite Browsing Kindle Edition
Most of us have had this experience: browsing through countless options on Netflix, unable to commit to watching any given movie—and losing so much time skimming reviews and considering trailers that it’s too late to watch anything at all. In a book inspired by an idea first articulated in a viral commencement address, Pete Davis argues that this is the defining characteristic of the moment: keeping our options open. We are stuck in “Infinite Browsing Mode”—swiping through endless dating profiles without committing to a single partner, jumping from place to place searching for the next big thing, and refusing to make any decision that might close us off from an even better choice we imagine is just around the corner. This culture of restlessness and indecision, Davis argues, is causing tension in the lives of young people today: We want to keep our options open, and yet we yearn for the purpose, community, and depth that can only come from making deep commitments.
In Dedicated, Davis examines this quagmire, as well as the counterculture of committers who have made it to the other side. He shares what we can learn from the “long-haul heroes” who courageously commit themselves to particular places, professions, and causes—who relinquish the false freedom of an open future in exchange for the deep fulfillment of true dedication. Weaving together examples from history, personal stories, and applied psychology, Davis’s “insightful without being preachy…guide to commitment should be on everyone’s reading list” (Booklist, starred review).
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAvid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster
- Publication dateMay 4, 2021
- File size1.5 MB
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About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B08LDYGTR7
- Publisher : Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : May 4, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 1.5 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 271 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1982140922
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,017,786 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #415 in Social Philosophy
- #945 in Social Psychology & Interactions
- #1,045 in Popular Social Psychology & Interactions
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Pete Davis is a writer and civic advocate from Falls Church, Virginia.
He works on civic projects aimed at deepening American democracy and solidarity. Pete is the co-founder of the Democracy Policy Network, a state policy organization focused on raising up ideas that deepen democracy, and is currently co-producing a documentary on the life and work civic guru Robert Putnam. In 2015, he cofounded Getaway, a company that provides simple, unplugged escapes to tiny cabins outside of major cities. His Harvard Law School graduation speech, “A Counterculture of Commitment,” has been viewed more than 30 million times — and was recently expanded into a book: Dedicated: The Case for Commitment in An Age of Infinite Browsing.
Pete is also the author of Our Bicentennial Crisis: A Call to Action for Harvard Law School’s Public Interest Mission, a book on reviving Harvard Law School’s public interest mission, and the co-author of How To Get Away: Finding Balance in our Overworked, Overcrowded, Always-On World, a book articulating Getaway’s philosophy of balancing technology and disconnection, city and nature, and work and leisure. His opinion pieces have appeared in The New York Daily News, Aeon, The Guardian, Fast Company, America Magazine, and The Falls Church News-Press.
Contact Pete at contact@PeteDavis.org, follow Pete on twitter @PeteDDavis, and subscribe to Pete’s newsletter at PeteDavis.substack.com.
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One of the most meaningful books I've ever read.
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2021Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseOne of the best books of the year. So well written. Pete does a great job of bringing into clarification on where we are at in our Infinite Browsing, how it came about, and what we individually can choose to do with it. While I am not a history buff, the examples he gave throughout the book were pertinent, and necessary. I really think we should all read and contemplate this book and what it's contents mean in our lives. I know that I do not want to stay in the hallway. Yes, you have to read the book to find out what that means. Finding a room here, and going to stay in it!
- Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2021Format: KindleVerified PurchaseAn inspiring essay on life, rich yet easy prose that goes down like candy and is worth the read in its own right, almost imperceptibly laced with teachings from the highest traditions of centuries of philosophy, and an insightful, provocative message that will catalyze if not force reflection likely to leave you both motivated to do better and at great peace with yourself. Strongly recommend.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2024Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis is definitely an eye opening book. Young need to at least be thinking about this. Helps you in mapping out a course in life.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2021Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThis is the exact book I needed to read, at the exact time I needed to read it. Helped me understand why I have such a hard time choosing a long-term focus.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2021Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis book highlights the beauty of commitment in different aspects not just romantic. We’re always seeking what’s new and exciting, but never realize how beautiful it is to go thru ups and downs with hobbies, books, movies, etc. In today’s world it’s easy to lose focus, but those who commit are indeed the most admirable, most fit, most successful.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2021Format: KindleVerified PurchaseJust like the title states. I think there are great points here but too many quotes, references and examples vs writing.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2024Format: AudiobookPete Davis speaks right to the heart of the familiar dissonance I often feel about my association with just about any group. He makes a strong case that no group will perfectly reflect your authentic (and evolving!) self and we need more gardeners and stewards who will stick around for the long haul to create meaningful change instead of cutting ties at the first whiff of tension. He explores what's at stake and also the depth and joy we have to gain by making commitments.
I closed the book feeling so much love for the people around me and place that I live. It made me want to jump in and be in relationship with the imperfect particulars around me. This is one of the most meaningful books I've ever read.
And it's beautiful! I love the deckle edge pages and look and feel of the cover.
5.0 out of 5 starsPete Davis speaks right to the heart of the familiar dissonance I often feel about my association with just about any group. He makes a strong case that no group will perfectly reflect your authentic (and evolving!) self and we need more gardeners and stewards who will stick around for the long haul to create meaningful change instead of cutting ties at the first whiff of tension. He explores what's at stake and also the depth and joy we have to gain by making commitments.One of the most meaningful books I've ever read.
Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2024
I closed the book feeling so much love for the people around me and place that I live. It made me want to jump in and be in relationship with the imperfect particulars around me. This is one of the most meaningful books I've ever read.
And it's beautiful! I love the deckle edge pages and look and feel of the cover.
Images in this review
- Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2021Format: KindleDedicated, by Pete Davis
Pete Davis has put his finger on the pulse of those under 40 years of age and found the vast majority split between the excitement of what he has labeled “Infinite Browsing,” or the “Culture of Open Options” and the “Counterculture of Commitment.” Davis covers all of this and more in his first book, “Dedicated: The Case for Commitment In An Age Of Infinite Browsing,” which hits shelves on May 4.
Davis writes that his book “is about the tension between these two cultures.” He likens the open options to a hallway with rooms. A young person can bounce to one or more rooms, i.e., experience new jobs, new relationships, new cities, or commit to stay in one “room” or live in the hallway. Davis writes that some of his peers “don’t commit to a career path because we’re worried that we will be stuck doing something that doesn’t quite fit our true self. Others of us are forced from job to job by a precarious economy. For many of us, it’s a little bit of both.”
Is this a new syndrome or has Davis locked onto an age-old problem that the young have struggled with in the last one hundred years?
Post-World War 1, a generation of survivors of that war took to speakeasies and sexual affairs with a mania born out of disgust. They tired of the commitments older generations had imposed on them, which led to a slaughter of vast numbers of young men on the battlefields of Europe. Joined by young women who had nursed the bloody soldiers or who had lost husbands, boyfriends and siblings, these “Bright Young Things” revelled in the illusion that they need not choose one of the many choices in front of them.
The ‘60s also spawned a generation of free-thinking individuals who got stuck on the old existential problem, “Why am I here?” Just as today, there was massive upheaval as the young protested the war in Vietnam. While that was mostly successful, the fight against racism, bigotry, misogyny, and homophobia still had decades to go before there were major societal changes, and we are still fighting for many of those changes today.
So, has Davis simply redressed an age-old problem in 21st Century clothing? No, I think he has used his brilliant laser focus to effectuate a change in his generation that no one else is championing, and which prior generations of young men and women grew old without understanding how they left the excitement of change behind.
He has done this by framing the Counterculture of Commitment not as a giving in to the monotony of adult life, like the protagonist in Herman Wouk’s “Marjorie Morningstar,” or the giving in to untethered philosophy of the beat generation, or the rejection of everything by the hippies.
Instead, Davis extolls the “Long Haul Heroism” of individuals who have spent decades creating and building the institutions that nurture and create stability in society, and he uses the “little city” of Falls Church, Virginia as the canvas for his discussion.
Addressing the low attention spans and “low commitment spans” of his generation, Davis writes “when you look at what we have real affection for — whom we admire, what we respect, and what we remember — it’s rarely the institutions and people who come from the Culture of Open Options. It’s the master committers we love.” As Davis introduces us to these master committers, we see that he also is penning a love letter to his hometown, Falls Church. He writes:
“I also grew up in a town — Falls Church, Virginia — that had a strong identity. It had a small school system and a rich civic life, especially for children: Boy and Girl Scouts, Operation EarthWatch, youth soccer and Little League every Saturday morning, the Falls Church News-Press at everyone’s door every Thursday, the fall festival in October, the Memorial Day parade in May. Behind every beloved institution in town was a dedicated person. Howard Herman helmed the weekly farmers’ market. Nikki and Ed Henderson were in charge of the annual blues festival. Nick Benton kept the News-Press running. Barb Cram kept the local art shows going. Sue John kept the preschool open. Tom Prewitt coached the youth basketball teams.”
Every one of the named master committers built or rebuilt their passion from scratch. For example, Benton drove into Falls Church one day in 1991 and said, “this town needs a newspaper,” and day after day for 30 years, he has produced that newspaper every week. Nikki and Ed Henderson moved back to Falls Church in 1994, from studying in Africa, and because of them Falls Church has the wonderful Tinner Hill’s Blues Festival.
Davis uses an analogy from Pete Seeger about a seesaw to explain the long-haul dedication required to build something and to effectuate changes.
“One side is planted firmly on the ground, weighed down by boulders. The side in the air has an empty basket atop it. A small group of people patiently work to fill the basket with sand, one teaspoon at a time. The crowd watching scoffs, because nothing is changing. But one day, the whole seesaw is going to flip — not little by little, but all at once. People will ask, “How did it happen so suddenly?” The answer, of course, is all those teaspoons over the years.”
Davis writes that he wrote his book to inspire others of his generation to become committers, committed to entering into “faithful relationships” with “particular causes and crafts, places and communities, professions and people.” He writes:
“If you care about advancing the continuing liberation struggles that will give people even more options and free people from even more involuntary commitments, then you need to care about commitment, too. We are only as free as we are today because committed citizens, patriots, builders, stewards, artisans, and companions got us here. And every struggle for justice that remains today will only be advanced if enough dedicated people step up again.”
Pete Davis has written an insightful book that also is an important book that, hopefully, will inspire, not just his generation, but all generations to dig deep and make the kind of commitments that will spark both creativity and stability.
(I was provided an advance review copy by the publisher through NetGalley.)
5.0 out of 5 starsDedicated, by Pete DavisAn exciting book that may change a generation
Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2021
Pete Davis has put his finger on the pulse of those under 40 years of age and found the vast majority split between the excitement of what he has labeled “Infinite Browsing,” or the “Culture of Open Options” and the “Counterculture of Commitment.” Davis covers all of this and more in his first book, “Dedicated: The Case for Commitment In An Age Of Infinite Browsing,” which hits shelves on May 4.
Davis writes that his book “is about the tension between these two cultures.” He likens the open options to a hallway with rooms. A young person can bounce to one or more rooms, i.e., experience new jobs, new relationships, new cities, or commit to stay in one “room” or live in the hallway. Davis writes that some of his peers “don’t commit to a career path because we’re worried that we will be stuck doing something that doesn’t quite fit our true self. Others of us are forced from job to job by a precarious economy. For many of us, it’s a little bit of both.”
Is this a new syndrome or has Davis locked onto an age-old problem that the young have struggled with in the last one hundred years?
Post-World War 1, a generation of survivors of that war took to speakeasies and sexual affairs with a mania born out of disgust. They tired of the commitments older generations had imposed on them, which led to a slaughter of vast numbers of young men on the battlefields of Europe. Joined by young women who had nursed the bloody soldiers or who had lost husbands, boyfriends and siblings, these “Bright Young Things” revelled in the illusion that they need not choose one of the many choices in front of them.
The ‘60s also spawned a generation of free-thinking individuals who got stuck on the old existential problem, “Why am I here?” Just as today, there was massive upheaval as the young protested the war in Vietnam. While that was mostly successful, the fight against racism, bigotry, misogyny, and homophobia still had decades to go before there were major societal changes, and we are still fighting for many of those changes today.
So, has Davis simply redressed an age-old problem in 21st Century clothing? No, I think he has used his brilliant laser focus to effectuate a change in his generation that no one else is championing, and which prior generations of young men and women grew old without understanding how they left the excitement of change behind.
He has done this by framing the Counterculture of Commitment not as a giving in to the monotony of adult life, like the protagonist in Herman Wouk’s “Marjorie Morningstar,” or the giving in to untethered philosophy of the beat generation, or the rejection of everything by the hippies.
Instead, Davis extolls the “Long Haul Heroism” of individuals who have spent decades creating and building the institutions that nurture and create stability in society, and he uses the “little city” of Falls Church, Virginia as the canvas for his discussion.
Addressing the low attention spans and “low commitment spans” of his generation, Davis writes “when you look at what we have real affection for — whom we admire, what we respect, and what we remember — it’s rarely the institutions and people who come from the Culture of Open Options. It’s the master committers we love.” As Davis introduces us to these master committers, we see that he also is penning a love letter to his hometown, Falls Church. He writes:
“I also grew up in a town — Falls Church, Virginia — that had a strong identity. It had a small school system and a rich civic life, especially for children: Boy and Girl Scouts, Operation EarthWatch, youth soccer and Little League every Saturday morning, the Falls Church News-Press at everyone’s door every Thursday, the fall festival in October, the Memorial Day parade in May. Behind every beloved institution in town was a dedicated person. Howard Herman helmed the weekly farmers’ market. Nikki and Ed Henderson were in charge of the annual blues festival. Nick Benton kept the News-Press running. Barb Cram kept the local art shows going. Sue John kept the preschool open. Tom Prewitt coached the youth basketball teams.”
Every one of the named master committers built or rebuilt their passion from scratch. For example, Benton drove into Falls Church one day in 1991 and said, “this town needs a newspaper,” and day after day for 30 years, he has produced that newspaper every week. Nikki and Ed Henderson moved back to Falls Church in 1994, from studying in Africa, and because of them Falls Church has the wonderful Tinner Hill’s Blues Festival.
Davis uses an analogy from Pete Seeger about a seesaw to explain the long-haul dedication required to build something and to effectuate changes.
“One side is planted firmly on the ground, weighed down by boulders. The side in the air has an empty basket atop it. A small group of people patiently work to fill the basket with sand, one teaspoon at a time. The crowd watching scoffs, because nothing is changing. But one day, the whole seesaw is going to flip — not little by little, but all at once. People will ask, “How did it happen so suddenly?” The answer, of course, is all those teaspoons over the years.”
Davis writes that he wrote his book to inspire others of his generation to become committers, committed to entering into “faithful relationships” with “particular causes and crafts, places and communities, professions and people.” He writes:
“If you care about advancing the continuing liberation struggles that will give people even more options and free people from even more involuntary commitments, then you need to care about commitment, too. We are only as free as we are today because committed citizens, patriots, builders, stewards, artisans, and companions got us here. And every struggle for justice that remains today will only be advanced if enough dedicated people step up again.”
Pete Davis has written an insightful book that also is an important book that, hopefully, will inspire, not just his generation, but all generations to dig deep and make the kind of commitments that will spark both creativity and stability.
(I was provided an advance review copy by the publisher through NetGalley.)
Images in this review
Top reviews from other countries
Amazon KundeReviewed in Germany on June 7, 20215.0 out of 5 stars This book is a little treasure
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseSometimes I come across awesome books. Little treasures to read. This is such a golden book. This book is ‘the extension’ of Pete’s awesome 2018 Harvard graduation speech, which I recommend watching. It’s a deeply inspiring 9 minutes video, you should go there if you are also struggling to narrow the focus in your life or work.
What you can learn from this book:
1. Understand the infinite browsing mode
Pete Davis explains the challenge of our ‘liquid modernity’: we can’t commit because we are afraid of doing that. I’ve personally experienced commitment to one expertise area is a difficult move. Davis’ explains the 3 fears this could come from:
- The fear of regret: we worry that if we commit to something, we will later regret having not committed to something else.
- The fear of association: we think that if we commit to something, we will be vulnerable to the chaos that that commitment brings to our identity, our reputation, and our sense of control.
- The fear of missing out (see also my previous book review about FOMO): we feel that if we commit to something, the responsibilities that come with it will prevent us from being everything, everywhere, to everyone.
2. The downside of keeping the options open
Davis explains that keeping the options open at first, is bringing the joy of new experiences but after a while starts getting us stuck and dissatisfied. It’s something I’ve experienced with so many (unfocused) people: they love to keep the options open but get burned out from jumping around and saying yes to almost everything. They all have the ambition to get known as subject matter experts but they are struggling to commit to the focus it requires. They get stuck in their infinite browsing mode which almost always leads to great despair in the long run. Davis’ book gives us great examples of the downside and provides us with hope and the process to leave our vicious liquid state.
3. The joy of depth
I will never forget Davis' saying: ‘Depth is your superpower’. Depth has been my way of living as a consultant the past decade and nobody ever described it as beautiful as Pete Davis: DEPTH IS YOUR SUPERPOWER. Wow! When we start going deep in our craft, we gain mastery, says Davis. And the depth that comes from such extended focus on our single craft, is a superpower. The narrowing is difficult (plenty of monsters waiting for us), says Davis, but the more time we add to something, the more beautiful it becomes. Davis finishes the book by stating that depth makes the ordinary extraordinary. What a wonderful closing.
Pete has inspired me tremendously (I listened to his audiobook - with Pete reading it himself - during a 7 hours car drive) and this treasure book will undoubtedly help me to inspire my clients to develop their superpower. Don't forget his graduation speech! Amazing!
Deeply recommended reading (or listening)!
-
LectorReviewed in Spain on August 3, 20221.0 out of 5 stars Bad quality edition
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchasePobre encuadernamiento, páginas mal cortadas (parecían cortadas a mano), cada pagina tiene un tamaño distinto y papel de baja calidad.
CameronReviewed in Canada on July 27, 20215.0 out of 5 stars A life enhancing ride into ourselves
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis was one of the best books I’ve ever read. It’s message is profound and deep and brings the reader face to face with the commitments we have and those we have abandoned. Why is this book one of the best? It’s message, its meaning and its timing.
It is well organized, the prose is engaging, the examples are good and varied as well. There is a blend of philosophy, science, social commentary, advocacy and yet all done gently enough to avoid being a polemic or manifesto, yet persuasive enough to make you sit up and pay attention to the way you treat your commitments. It’s a book we need now and the most important book I’ve read in years.
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Luis HurtadoReviewed in Mexico on May 8, 20225.0 out of 5 stars Una reflexión valiosa sobre la crisis de la indecisión.
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseHay muchas ideas muy interesantes que nos ayudan a entender el contexto de oportunidades que tenemos y la dificultad que experimentamos para navegar en él. Sin adelantar más, este libro me ayudó a ser mas consciente de la importancia de la seguridad emocional para tomar decisiones y el impacto que esto tiene en mi calidad de vida. Espero que lo disfrutes también.
AdnaOReviewed in Germany on September 29, 20232.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed with the biding
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseI am really disappointed with the binding of the book - looks cheap and if someone butchered the pages with a blunt object. This is really shameful :/
I am really disappointed with the binding of the book - looks cheap and if someone butchered the pages with a blunt object. This is really shameful :/2.0 out of 5 stars
AdnaODisappointed with the biding
Reviewed in Germany on September 29, 2023
Images in this review

























