Vernor Vinge's "Across Realtime", "A Fire Upon the Deep", "A Deepness in the Sky", and "Rainbows End".
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C. J. Cherryh's book "Cyteen", about attempts to replicate human personality.
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Julia Jaynes' very strange book on the origins of consciousness. It's almost certainly wrong, but it's a very interesting kind of wrong, and a remarkable endeavour.
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I can't walk three blocks in a new city without thinking of Jane Jacobs' book "The Death and Life of Great American Cities"
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Seymour Papert's amazing book "Mindstorms", which I think of as being about the design of powerful immersive environments for creative work
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Elinor Ostrom's wonderful (albeit sometimes dry) book "Governing the Commons", which shows that there need not be a tragedy of the commons, & that there is a third way beyond managing commons vs creating property rights & a market:https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/1159033827 …
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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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Replying to @michael_nielsen
I love not engaging in signaling. If you really mean it, I might add a reframed question “what are your guilty pleasures or least expected books, articles videos etc that you’ve revisited over meant years?” To chase your original one. Actually, I’ll just do it :)
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That's a better variation question! I guess I like both variants, since there's "serious" stuff that people read over and over too.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Yeah! I’m also excited to see replies to both!
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