What are some books, videos, articles, papers, and essays you've revisited over and over, perhaps for many years?
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Richard Adams' terrifying "Watership Down": https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/943451418 …pic.twitter.com/58ICHGxeRj
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I'm asking because I find there are works that seem to almost compel rewatching / rereading. Any my theory is that there's usually extremely good reasons for that, something my unconscious is trying to tell me.
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I realize it's almost impossible not to engage in signalling, to describe the "right" books, videos etc. But there's something valuable in being forthright (at least with yourself!) about what you really find compelling, even if it's the "wrong" material, by conventional lights
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Those above are few of the things I've read or watched 5 or more times. I may add more later as I think of them. (The exceptions are Jaynes and Ostrom, which I've revisited, but mostly just find myself thinking about over and over.)
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Oh, for some more material not on the lists of things you "should" like: Bujold's books "Memory" and "Mirror Dance" and "A Civil Campaign"; the movies "Almost Famous", "The Game", "Titanic", and "Cloud Atlas". I find all compelling...
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Biographies I can't help revisiting over and over: Skidelsky on Keynes (get the abridged one volume, it's better than the full 3 volumes), and Gleick on Feynman.
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Imre Lakatos's amazing book "Proofs and Refutations", which is about how we make definitions. I realize that doesn't exactly sound like a page-turner, but it's another book that completely changed my life & thinking.
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"managing commons" should be "government managing the commons". The dichotomy which Ostrom very nicely smashes is between government and the market.
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I sometimes think of Ostrom as the best piece I've ever read on open source software. Which is pretty good, considering it was published in 1990, before Linux had even been announced...
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This looks very interesting. Thanks for the recommendation and review!
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