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Showing posts from 2019

We are not friends....

we are not friends… we’ve never invited each other for dinner or exchanged gifts, or made plans to catch the first day first shows we’re not even connected on Facebook, nor do we make each other laugh on snapchat we are poles apart… but in the endeavour, in resolve… we’re quite alike strangers in real life… but when we meet, there’s an unspoken bond, a trust that is deeply felt, and holding hands a new sky opens up. strangers… yet closer than friends

Sapiens - A brief history of Humankind

Here comes the first review of  "A Brief History Of Time" of religion, the scientific revolution, industrialisation, the  is very particular. He is best, in my view, on the modern world and his far-sighted analysis of what we are doing to ourselves struck many chords with me. Nevertheless, in my opinion the book is also deeply flawed in places and Harari is a much better social scientist than he is philosopher, logician or historian. His critique of modern social ills is very refreshing and objective, his piecing together of the shards of pre-history imaginative and appear to the non-specialist convincing, but his understanding of some historical periods and documents is much less impressive – demonstrably so, in my view. A curiously encouraging end :- I found the very last page of the book curiously encouraging: "We are more powerful than ever before…Worse still, humans seem to be more irresponsible than ever. Self-made gods with only the laws of physics to keep us ...

Is reading worth it?

Is Reading worth it? The point of reading isn’t to memorize, and it’s certainly not to critique. It’s to absorb and filter with an open mind — to find the right thing at the right time so that you can improve and update your existing model of reality rather than mold whatever you’re reading to fit into it as it is. The beauty of this mindset is that you don’t actually need to filter this consciously. You just need to decide that it’s okay not to agree, and it’s fine to overlook what doesn’t make sense. From there, your mind will automatically filter for what is relevant and what is not. When it does, you’ll know — it’ll change you in a way memorisation can’t.