Walkaway by Cory Doctorow. I was interested in anarchism in my college years, but turned away from it because of what I perceived as the strongman problem. What happens when the psychopaths come for what you have?
Walkaway solved that. In a post scarcity society, you walk away. Let them have your shit. You can build new shit, better shit, avoiding the mistakes you made and making grander mistakes forever into the future.
This book brought me back into the fold. It was transformative, and in a really big way
There's different flavors of anarchism just like there's different flavors of anything. Saying they'd all "attack x first" is very far beyond what any person can reasonably predict. Particularly given how chaotic anarchy can be.
I agree that its a fantastic resource. But the only times that book gets opened is when I'm about to make my brain hurt bigly and it makes me regret choosing mechanical eng just a liiiiiitle bit.
I return to it ever couple of years, always in bad times and often in good times too. Everyone is trying to do the best they can, contributing what they can. Only few characters are at all malicious. Emotions are deep and powerful, portrayed lightly. The whole story is a great collaboration where wildly different people overcome their differences to reach a single, all-encompassing goal.
The Jedi Code: A Manual for Students of the Force. I am lucky enough to have a copy which been passed from master to student, and many annotations have been added to enrich, update or contest the material in the book, which really widens the perspective. Sadly, a section near the front of the book has been ripped out, I’m guessing that one of my predecessors wanted to scan the section regarding the Prophecy of the Chosen One - probably to email a PDF of it to Master Windu!
I have a version of The More Than Complete Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy that's genuine leather bonded with gold leaf page edges and builtin bookmark. It's on display on a special shelf. Everyone who visits thinks it's a bible, and in a way it is as it does have a lot of good advice about life, the universe and everything.
Thinking fast and slow, Daniel Kahneman
Truly a great book that has been influential in how I approach presenting material to other people and in making sense of the world. Daniel and his long standing research partner received the Nobel prize in economics with there work in behavioral psychology. The book teaches you how people think, make decisions, and process information.
Antifragile, nassim taleb.
I won't say much other than to make a counterpoint. As much as I enjoyed the book and his presentation and arguments around making systems antifragile, his witing can be summarized by a quote from Dr. Tetlock: "His witing is like a fine French meal, gently dusted with shit." Taleb is a bit up his own ass at times, but antifragile is imo his best work.
Superforcasting, Phillip Tetlock.
Great book on how to quantify the chance of future events. Famously feuding with nassim taleb, though really it's more taleb feuding with anyone who has different ideas than him.
Man's search for meaning, Victor frankl.
One of the most interesting, heart wrenching and warming books. Whether you subscribe to his exact philosophies, frankl is a wonderful read.
The better angels of our nature, Steven pinker.
Probably the most exhaustively assembled academic book I've ever read on the trends of progress.
Origin story, David Christian.
An excellent history of everything with a focus on the repeating patterns of humanity trending towards more complex social interactions. Am easy and enjoyable read.
I don't think you deserve the downvotes and attacks. I believe they're from people who think everyone who reads the bible is a right wing religious fanatic. Same as the people who think everyone who reads the Koran is a jihadist, which ironically tends to be...
I came here to say that. Sorry about the abuse you're about to take. But we deserve it apparently. Sins of the fathers or "people like us" or something, I guess.
You literally only said "The Bible" and I already saw some frothing.
Not saying this book is 100% correct and perfect, but most parts of it is still relevant and refreshingly insightful even after 20 years. I sure learned a lot about great engineering and generally how to approch and tackle difficult problems from it.
This book is notable for me for making Buddhist philosophy and practices accessible to a western audience, fostering a deeper understanding of mindfulness, compassion, and the path to spiritual awakening. It has been an invaluable resource for my interests in Buddhism, meditation, and personal growth.
Pulling Your Own Strings by Wayne Dyer gave me a lot of confidence.
His other books have a spiritual bent to them, I believe (I haven't read them), but the above book is just straightfoward advice.
It's a collection of his writings from the early nineties, edited into a book. In it, he fairly accurately predicts the rise of what we now know as Google, YouTube, smartphones, on-demand, streaming, curated content, social media, multitouch, ditigal television, digital Aristotle, remote working and so on...
Your pain is the breaking of the shell that encloses your understanding. As the stone of the fruit must break so that it's heart may stand in the sun, so must you feel pain...It is the bitter potion by which the physician inside you heals your sick self. Trust the physician, and drink his remedy in silence and tranquility.
Love this quote, but struggling to look the book up. Do you by chance mean "The Prophet" by the same author? There's a painting by his cousin (with the same name) called "The Prince" so I could totally see the names getting confused.
If it's really The Prince, can you link it? I just love this quote a lot
Not a combination I would have ever expected, but once I realized the latter was building its ideas on top of the former's atomism and evolutionary thinking, the combo suddenly clicked and I was looking at philosophical ideas not only aligned with where I'd been at previously, but advancing my thinking significantly.
Probably some of the most intriguing ideas from antiquity I've ever seen, and much more advanced than I'd have envisioned I'd find.
Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey. I only discovered it fairly recently and it has already become my go-to read whenever I'm looking for some peace and simple natural spirituality with a generous side of denouncing the absurdity of modern culture and overaggressive "progress" and development.
I try to find guidance on how to interact with the system, and how to interpret others actions from a very neutral but very comprehensive, guide to practical morality which is the GG for me.
Also I just love Art1 " Die würde des Menschen ist unantastbar"
Obviously it has some flaws, but if you interpret it enough it gives a good baseline for interpersonal stuff. Also it is the base law in Germany so practical value can also exist.
@jack considering I never really read the bible and understood it completely, I'd say the one in the pic. Bought it in English when no course was held in English and no requirements were needed on getting anything of Informatics in English. I shipped this boy on literally the seven seas when changing continent. There are things I still don't understand such as Linear Programming ... and I will never read that section probably
Probably the Gateless Gate, the Eiichi Shimomissé translation. I'm actually a Discordian, but I find the Principia best for introduction. It devotes a lot of space to silly rules you're supposed to violate and other introductory concepts and practices. And Illuminatus! is plagued by a masculine confidence and aggression that both the writers and Hagbard were aware of and tried to minimize. The Gateless Gate is, to me, much better for staying deep in the untethered state of pure Discordian existence. It talks a little much of patriarchs, but it's not thematically essential. And it isn't rooted in and doesn't reference modern western theology and philosophy like the Principia because it was never intended to stand in contrast to or lead people out of modern western theology. Both the Principia and Illuminatus! reference it in some way because secular zen is important to the development of Discordianism. Maybe no book has ever changed my life as much as Illuminatus! but the Mumonkan is one of my primary tools for staying rooted in this way of being. It's with me all the time. One of the first things I do when I get a new phone is make sure my Mumonkan made it over or go download it again. I read it whenever I'm feeling lost or confused and uncertain about a decision or life change. It always leads me back to me.
The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. It's terrible and fascinating at the same time. What I took away from it is that there is an inherent value in things you build yourself and a moral right to own your creations. I know the book is flawed in many ways, but I still think it's an interesting read. Wouldn't exactly call it my bible, but I don't think any book fits that description.