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  #976  
Old 09-08-2022, 06:16 PM
robertbb robertbb is offline
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The End of the World is Just the Beginning - Peter Zeihan

https://www.amazon.com/End-World-Jus.../dp/006323047X

Highly recommended. Be sure to have a beer (or three) handy, it's brilliant but heavy reading on where this world is all headed.
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  #977  
Old 12-08-2022, 10:50 AM
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brockd15 brockd15 is offline
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Currently I'm on Great Expectations.

I started listening to audiobooks regularly earlier this year and have been going through a lot books I've always wanted to have read but haven't taken the time to actually do it. Mostly classics but other stuff as well.
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  #978  
Old 12-08-2022, 01:54 PM
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Hilltopwalters Hilltopwalters is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by robertbb View Post
The End of the World is Just the Beginning - Peter Zeihan

https://www.amazon.com/End-World-Jus.../dp/006323047X

Highly recommended. Be sure to have a beer (or three) handy, it's brilliant but heavy reading on where this world is all headed.
This is definitely going to the top of the pile I'll be getting into while on Winter Break. Much of my area of study has to do with environmental degradation and its glaringly obvious impact. So consider me curious.
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  #979  
Old 03-15-2024, 04:42 PM
dustyrider dustyrider is offline
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Maybe someone could combine the threads!? William also started a good one on movies but my search-fu is weak…

Forgot to add what I’m reading:

The Nez Perce Indians and the Opening of the Northwest by Alvin M. Josephy, JR.

It’s my second reading. I found the book in late ‘99 at a take one leave one book exchange. It was a huge influence in my many backpacking trips in the PNW.

Last edited by dustyrider; 03-15-2024 at 07:27 PM.
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  #980  
Old 03-15-2024, 06:51 PM
Idris Icabod Idris Icabod is offline
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Bad Blood Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup.

The story of Theranos. Incredible stuff!
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  #981  
Old Today, 08:43 AM
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C40_guy C40_guy is offline
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Went looking for a couple of recommendations...found them!

Just borrowed a couple of Richard Feynman books via Libby for a solo roadtrip this weekend.

Recently read Will It Make The Boat Go Faster. This is a great story on many levels!
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  #982  
Old Today, 09:49 AM
bigbill bigbill is online now
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I've probably mentioned it before, but Ned Blackhawk's Rediscovering America looks at American History from the Native perspective. This book inspired me to write a thesis about the root cause of the American Revolution by combining the view looking west with the view looking east to find a more accurate way of describing history instead of relying on the winner's pov.
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  #983  
Old Today, 10:05 AM
dcama5 dcama5 is offline
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Most books I read are nonfiction dealing with the civil war or antebellum south. But right now (on the recommendation of our daughter) I am reading The Gulf: The Making of a American Sea by Jack Davis. It won the Pulitzer Prize for history in 2018.

https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/jack-e-davis
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  #984  
Old Today, 10:23 AM
XXtwindad XXtwindad is offline
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Great thread!
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  #985  
Old Today, 10:39 AM
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Bob Ross Bob Ross is online now
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bob Ross View Post
I'm currently re-reading Daniel Dennett's Darwin's Dangerous Idea
...[snip]...
I love Dennett's writing but find it almost always requires a second (or third, or fourth) reading to completely grasp his ideas and insights. This will be my second time through this book...
Continuing my tradition of re-reading Daniel C. Dennett books multiple times, I am currently about halfway through his From Bacteria To Bach And Back for what I believe is the third time. (!)
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  #986  
Old Today, 11:16 AM
marciero marciero is offline
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Here is the latest


1, Once they moved like the wind. Am re-reading. Read this about 25 years ago. Very colorful and detailed history of the Apache wars late 19th century. As a kid I lived in Fort Sill Oklahoma, where Geronimo is buried, and his presence loomed large.

2. When Pride Still Mattered. Just finished. (may have posted already?) Vince Lombardi bio. Is portrait of the legend but also the human. This is the flip side of Instant Replay, which I read as a child.

3. "Erasing History: How fascists rewrite the past to control the future", This is hot off the press by Yale philosopher Jason Stanley. Lets just say its timely.

4. "Son of Hamas". 2010 but relevant. Mosab Hasaan Yousef. Interesting description of life growing up Palestinian, and as son of a Hamas founder no less. The author eventually flipped sides. I read about half then lost interest

5. My Eff'in Life. Geddy Lee. Great read even as a non-fan.
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  #987  
Old Today, 11:21 AM
marciero marciero is offline
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Originally Posted by Bob Ross View Post
Continuing my tradition of re-reading Daniel C. Dennett books multiple times, I am currently about halfway through his From Bacteria To Bach And Back for what I believe is the third time. (!)
Dennet?? I read one of his about 20 years ago. At least I started it. I think that was another I didnt finish. I am seeing that he wrote one with Douglass Hofstaeder. I read one of his a while back- Godel, Escher, Bach, speaking of Bach
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  #988  
Old Today, 11:36 AM
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Bob Ross Bob Ross is online now
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Originally Posted by marciero View Post
Dennet?? I read one of his about 20 years ago. At least I started it. I think that was another I didnt finish. I am seeing that he wrote one with Douglass Hofstaeder. I read one of his a while back- Godel, Escher, Bach, speaking of Bach
I have tried reading Godel, Escher, Bach two or three times...the farthest I've gotten is 150 pages in. The problem for me is twofold: I don't get the math at all, and I don't have the patience to work through the problem-solving thought experiments, so the bulk of his premise is completely lost on me. And yet, I find the "Dialogues" chapters insufferably cloying and patronizing. I finally sold my copy to the local book store a couple months ago, conceding that I would never read the entire book.

Conversely, Daniel C. Dennett may well be my favorite non-fiction writer of all time. I highly recommend Consciousness Explained as a first foray*, though I will confess that it took me four or five readings before I could get all the way through to the end. But it is just so thought-provoking that I kept trying, and ultimately I'm very glad I did.

*(although Darwin's Dangerous Idea might be the tiniest bit easier to swallow in the first pass)
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  #989  
Old Today, 12:35 PM
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redir redir is offline
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  #990  
Old Today, 12:52 PM
sg8357 sg8357 is offline
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Rudolf Diesel, history/mystery, true story.
Fun fact, Diesel's first engine ran on peanut oil.
Diesel figured Germany & Britain would run their diesel engines on coal tar.
Energy independence 1899 style.

Big Kerosene aka John D. Rockefeller was not fan,
gasoline was an unwanted by product of kerosene production at the time.
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