I'll go out on a limb and guess you meant the 2nd book (the red one.) If that's what you meant, they are different books. The 2nd book builds directly on the foundation of the 1st book. I personally found the 2nd book to be more of what I was actually looking for (self-disciple, goals, learning, focus, etc.) since the 1st book deals mainly with tilt, fear, etc. (something that I had very few problems with.) Having said that, I don't think the 1st book should be skipped. I say this because even I found some minor tilt that I wasn't aware of before reading it (and I would have said before reading it that I don't tilt at all, which would've been wrong technically ... I just didn't tilt very much.) The author also says something like: the finer points within the 2nd book are things that become more difficult to improve on if you suffer from any problems that are covered in the 1st book (which is why he started there.)
If you really meant 2nd edition, then I just wasted some time out of all of our lives
and it's as statmanhal said:
Quote:
Originally Posted by statmanhal
a 2nd edition is usually an updated version of the first edition. Can include the following: errors are corrected, existing theory and practice are updated, new theory is introduced, trends are identified, examples are expanded, index is added. etc.
I haven't looked it up since the day I bought the book, so I'm not aware if there is a 2nd edition or not. I'm honestly too lazy to look it up now and it was just easier for me to type all of this.
I don't want to discourage you from asking questions, but simply looking at the table of contents would probably have answered your question either way. 2p2 can be pretty rude in some other parts of the forum.
I hope one of us answered your Q. GL.
p.s. If there is a 2nd edition, I'd appreciate you letting us lazy folks know.