Reddit mentions: The best management & leadership books

We found 98 Reddit comments discussing the best management & leadership books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 15 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

1. Shadow & Claw: The First Half of 'The Book of the New Sun'

    Features:
  • Orb Books
Shadow & Claw: The First Half of 'The Book of the New Sun'
Specs:
Height8.17 Inches
Length5.8200671 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 1994
Weight1.00089866948 Pounds
Width1.1448796 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

2. Mind & Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False

    Features:
  • Oxford University Press USA
Mind & Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False
Specs:
Height5.6 Inches
Length8.4 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0.64815905028 Pounds
Width0.7 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

3. Groups and Symmetry (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics)

Groups and Symmetry (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics)
Specs:
Height9.21 Inches
Length6.14 Inches
Number of items1
Weight2.2928075248 Pounds
Width0.5 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

6. The Arctic Grail: The Quest for the North West Passage and the North Pole, 1818-1909

    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
The Arctic Grail: The Quest for the North West Passage and the North Pole, 1818-1909
Specs:
Height9 Inches
Length1.5 Inches
Number of items1
Weight1.65 Pounds
Width6.5 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

8. Greens Glorious Greens!: More than 140 Ways to Prepare All Those Great-Tasting, Super-Healthy, Beautiful Leafy Greens

Greens Glorious Greens!: More than 140 Ways to Prepare All Those Great-Tasting, Super-Healthy, Beautiful Leafy Greens
Specs:
Height9.1869895 Inches
Length7 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateMarch 1996
Weight1.00089866948 Pounds
Width0.61 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

9. El método Lean Startup: Cómo crear empresas de éxito utilizando la innovación continua (Sin colección) (Spanish Edition)

El método Lean Startup: Cómo crear empresas de éxito utilizando la innovación continua (Sin colección) (Spanish Edition)
Specs:
Height9.0551 Inches
Length5.9055 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateFebruary 2012
Weight0.78484565272 Pounds
Width0.787401574 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

11. Enjoy Your Money!: How to Make It, Save It, Invest It and Give It

Used Book in Good Condition
Enjoy Your Money!: How to Make It, Save It, Invest It and Give It
Specs:
Height10 Inches
Length7 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateMarch 2009
Weight1.04 Pounds
Width0.61 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

12. Awake at Work: 35 Practical Buddhist Principles for Discovering Clarity and Balance in the Midst of Work's Chaos

Shambhala Publications
Awake at Work: 35 Practical Buddhist Principles for Discovering Clarity and Balance in the Midst of Work's Chaos
Specs:
ColorCeladon/Pale green
Height7.73 Inches
Length5.49 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateFebruary 2006
Weight0.6 Pounds
Width0.65 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

13. Human Competence: Engineering Worthy Performance

    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
Human Competence: Engineering Worthy Performance
Specs:
Height9 Inches
Length6 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateApril 2007
Weight1.53441734352 Pounds
Width1.13 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

🎓 Reddit experts on management & leadership books

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where management & leadership books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 18
Number of comments: 5
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 13
Number of comments: 3
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 6
Number of comments: 3
Relevant subreddits: 3
Total score: 6
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 5
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 4
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: -2
Number of comments: 3
Relevant subreddits: 2

idea-bulb Interested in what Redditors like? Check out our Shuffle feature

Shuffle: random products popular on Reddit

Top Reddit comments about Motivational Management & Leadership:

u/karmaceutical · 11 pointsr/ReasonableFaith

Awesome, thanks for waiting, I appreciate it. First off, I am neither a pastor nor classically trained in any way regarding this stuff, just another guy searching for the truth (although I bet I'm a little older so maybe I have been through some of the questions you have).

Before I jump in, I want to kind of set the stage a bit, if you don't mind. First, what does it mean to be a Christian or to be a follower of Jesus? Does it mean believing in a worldwide flood? Does it mean believing in a Young Earth Creation? Does it mean we can't believe in evolution? I think you will find that Christianity tolerates a wide variety of viewpoints, even though specific denominations and adherents may not. There are some things that are pretty central to Christianity, what we might call Mere Christianity, which falls along the lines of the Apostle's Creed. Whenever you hear critiques of Christianity, it is nice to go back to this foundational belief set and see if the critiques actually chip away at the bedrock (which is expressed in the creed) or just at the periphery. I find that they rarely do.

Second, when we look at stories written in the Bible, I want to state that it is wrong to just pick and choose what to believe but it is right to pick a consistent model of interpretation and apply it. This means that I don't have to take things literally (like the "trees clapping their hands" when alluding leaves brushing together in the wind) but I do have to be consistent. We should also read the Bible with the genre of each book in mind. Obviously the poetry of Songs of Solomon should be treated differently from a letter of Paul or a book of laws like Deuteronomy.

Let me try now and respond to some of your specific problems.

> However many Creationists say that I have to believe in a literal interpretation

As William Lane Craig says, the creation story allows for "all manner of interpretation". Even the great church fathers like St Augustine discussed how the world possessed potencies created by God that would unravel over time. The Catholic Church has explicitly said "Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the notion of creation". So, I think this is an example of something that is on the periphery. Believing in evolution (or not) isn't central to being a Christian. The only part of evolution that would be unacceptable to the Christian would be that it is wholly unguided which is a metaphysical questions which Science, in principle, could not discern.

> Noah's ark

There are a lot of ways to address this. Are you open to the existence of miracles? Did the writer of Genesis mean the whole world or the known world? Are there far fewer "kinds" of animals (which Genesis refers to) rather than "species"? Is the believer committed to a global flood and not just a flood of the known world? I think answers to these questions invite a number of responses that give Christians a broad spectrum of beliefs.

> Evolution

As I mentioned before, Theistic Evolution is a commonly accepted belief. I happen to think that evolution is both wildly improbable and did happen. I believe it was guided or superintended by God.

> God is omni benevolent, omnipotent and omniscent then how can evil be allowed

This is a really big question to which there are several responses, all of which combined, IMHO, make a pretty strong case that we would actually expect there to be evil. The first and foremost response is the Free Will defense. It wouldn't do justice to the problem for me to try and rehash the arguments here, so I have linked to another place where I have discussed this issue and I am happy to discuss further if you follow up with more questions.

> Why is it that a woman is "unclean" for longer if they have a baby girl than if they have a baby boy? That seems a bit sexist to me.

I don't know, but I generally believe that the law of the OT was created to allow a society to survive. Because of Free Will, mankind had to progress. We learned. We weren't ready for everything all at once. This is one of the areas where I struggle the most (I have 3 daughters). If anything, it pushes my position on Biblical Inerrancy. And even if I had to abandon that doctrine, it wouldn't mean that I couldn't still come to believe in Mere Christianity.

> science and logic seem to be so in favour of atheism

Here is where I am confused. I have found Christian Theism to be eminently more consistent with the data of experience and our logical understanding than atheism and naturalism. On Atheism there is ultimately no foundation, everything is just a giant brute fact. The Universe just exists for no reason at all. IMHO, Atheism and Naturalism are permeated with philosophically undercutting problems.

If you get a chance, I would highly recommend you read two things, one by a Christian philosopher and one by an atheist philosopher. I would be happy to purchase you a copy of the latter's book if you cannot afford it yourself. The first is available in PDF and is Alvin Plantinga's Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism which shows that if Naturalism and Atheism are true, one cannot rationally believe in them, because one must admit that our mental faculties are selected for survivability and not truth. The second is a stunning book by the widely regarded atheist thinker Thomas Nagel called Mind & Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Reality is Almost Certainly False. Before you do anything else, I would read these two books, really dig down and spend some time with them, looking up terms and making sure you understand the arguments. I think you will find, like I did, that the atheist, naturalist philosophical stance is only superficially superior, and that there are great, unworked faults that lie at the center of a matter-first model of philosophy.

> when I pray, I feel nothing

I'm right there with you bud. I don't recall ever feeling the direct presence of God when praying. I feel God mostly in his discipline of me. Hebrews 12:16 "because the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and he chastens everyone he accepts as his son."

My belief in God is only loosely supported on what most people could call an experiential event. I believe in God with all my heart, soul, strength and mind. I am just straight up convinced.

Please feel free to ask any more questions you might have!

u/ThMogget · 1 pointr/philosophy

>Things are made of behaviors that are made of behaviors
>
>Well this claim is disputable. One might simply reply that science only observes behaviors but has a blind spot on ontological reality. This was a criticism even Russel (and others) raised.

I don't mind making claims that are disputable, as long as they are reasonable. Do you accept that it is possible that there are only behaviors, and that such a description is coherent and useful, if possibly open to being wrong? I am quite pleased that you see that this behaviors-only view is informed by and compatible with science - that was my primary goal.

Yes science only observes behaviors, and it is able to say a great deal about the world with just that. While it is good to keep an eye out for these blind spots, I am still waiting for the god or platonic object of the gaps to rear its head and be relevant. Do you claim to know there is actually something in the blind spot worth caring about?

>It highlights the world in a very different way... which might not fit the narrow mechanistic vision we all try to fit everything now, but there is no reason to think such mechanistic view is true, in fact there are good reasons to think it's not correct. Thomas Nagel (not a religious guy at all) presents a good case in his book Mind and Cosmos 1

Thanks for that source. I have added it to my audible list, but I can tell from the title and and little poking around wikipedia that someone is about to argue for the mind to somehow be special and magical and mystical, as separate from the rest of the cosmos. I have heard the name Nagel thrown around too much to not read this.

>First I think it's pretty clear that the distinction between a table and a tree does exist, since tree grow, but tables are something that are necessarily imposed by humans on a tree.

A tree and a table are different whether that table was made by humans or by natural forces. You can make a table that grows, at least in theory, just as you can have a brain-in-a-vat thought experiment. You could also just grow a tree into a table. If your metaphysics is limited by what humans do, it will have a built-in lack of imagination.

To contradict your point, the difference between the table and tree is just one of arrangement and behavior. A car that is running because it has fuel and spark doesn't have a magical life essence or a quality of moving - its parts are just moving because they are arranged right. A broken car behaves different from working one, as its arrangement is different. I will say it again - Any unique arrangement of matter has unique causal powers. What you are doing is drawing special importance to some arrangements and behaviors over others. To me they are all just arrangements. The difference between living and dead, conscious or not, thermonuclear or not, reactive alkali or not, radioactive or not, these are all important things to notice, but they don't exist in different worlds or different sets of descriptions. They are all behaviors that result from behaviors. You can fill libraries with the very important differences and details here, but you cannot claim that properties or consciousness or qualia are metaphysically special. All that is results from the mechanistic behavior of things. My additional claim beyond garden-variety materialism is that you can eliminate the mech and just say behavior.

>The "field view" seems to reflect what we observe experimentally, but this does not mean necessarily it is ontologically true ... Right about 120 years ago scientists thought their physical view of the world was complete and done

It sounds to me like two completely different topics here. One is accuracy of a model to fit data, either existing data or new data coming out. I just asked you to not confuse the map and the terrain, and here you are doing it. We went from a model that fit the data well under a materialistic paradigm, to a better model that fit better data well still under a materialistic paradigm. What has changed is map, what has not changed is science's continued confidence that the terrain is mechanistic and can be described ever better by only doing better and better models with better and better data. At no point was materialism upended, and it is materialism we are talking about here, not any one scientific model.

What do you mean by ontologically true, anyway? It doesn't sound like it matters how accurate the latest model is to the latest observations of reality. Is a better map more ontologically true to the terrain? Or are you talking about some feature of reality that cannot be described by an infinitely precise model, because it really works by magic? If so, no level of precision or completeness of science will sway you.

I think essentialism is another attempt to add meaningless dualism with another name attached to it. I would check out this "Real Essentialism", but 50 bucks for a paperback is steep.

u/rushhour_swe · 1 pointr/AskReddit

I'm 19 now and I am currently in my first real relationship that has worked for more than six months and it's going quite well but I'm afraid it won't work when I go to college next year (Colorado College to anyone who is interested). But that doesn't really matter...
I have some tips I can give you because I was very much like you just a few years ago until I my dad got sick of me not doing anything and convinced me to sign a contract with his personal trainer which basically said he could come and get me anytime, any day of the week for me to workout for 1 to 3 hours. I have no idea how he convinced me to agree to this, but I am very grateful that he did because after a while after running, going to the gym, and doing sports 5 times a week for a couple hours at one gradually increased my confidence by a huge amount. I went from an awkward guy who looked down when speaking because of my incredibly low self-confidence.

If going to the gym isn't anything for you then I suggest just going for a run everyday. Doesn't matter if you go for 5 minutes or 30, aslong as you do something you will release endorphins that make you feel better. It's a good step to gaining confidence which will make you a less awkward guy.

Another tip is just to do things all the time, don't say no to things you don't feel comfortable with. So go with your friends to the club on friday night, or you could perhaps be the initiator yourself and plan stuff. The more things you do, the more people you will meet, and the chance that you find someone you like is greater.

Something that helped my body language and in turn, my social skills, was a book called non-verbal advantage, it's not only for dating, but it will help you, trust me.

I'm not an expert in dating or meeting girls, but I always have a very easy time talking to them and other things aswell ;)

Good luck my friend!

u/Proverbs313 · 1 pointr/DebateAnAtheist

> Yes being incomprehensible by essence-energies is special pleading.

You're going to have to explain yourself here. Being incomprehensible is not an ability or a property, if anything its a reference our inabilities rather than anything about God at all. No idea how you get this idea of there being any sort of special pleading here.

> I asked if you buy this, you never did answer...

You've asked for evidence and all sorts of other things but I've only been trying to tell you what the Orthodox Christians teach.

> God of the gaps...

Stop following your script. I'm not saying God explains anything at all. Do we have the theory of everything? Have all questions in science have been answered as well as philosophy, we're all done here? Last I checked we're still searching for a theory of everything... You claim way more than you can support. You shouldn't be a naturalist if you acknowledge how little we actually know...

> Doesn't matter if you reject it, you are giving non-natural properties to a god. Special pleading again.

I've given no properties to God. From the beginning I noted that the Orthodox teach God's essence to be ineffable. The Orthodox do not believe we can ascribe anything to God's essence in any language or idea.

> Yep you did, and you did so in the paragraph above. Sorry, calling your point some other label doesn't change it from being such.

Show me a direct quote, prove your accusations. All I've been talking about is the essence-energies distinction.

> Nope, it is not about me, and immaterial to the discussion.

So you're full of it, got it. "What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence" -Christopher Hitchens

> How quaint that you thing Ivy League gives any weight to an argument as well.

Straw man. I never said that at all. I'm not saying credentials makes me right, they're mere indications of the reliability of my sources. Anybody who knows about quality of education knows Ivy League universities are notorious for being the most selective, most endowed (better resources and more access to said resources, all that jazz), and having award winning faculty like Nobel Laureates etc. Come on now, let's stop pretending like Ivy League Universities are nothing when we know they're among the greatest academic institutions in the world.

> Who said bob's university is not accredited? And for somebody who claims to know, you really don't. You do understand there are differences on how different schools inside a university run and how different fields apply scholarship, do you not?

Who said Bob wasn't accredited? I was merely talking about differences between universities and they do matter as you even acknowledge with accreditation... Your mere reaction right here proves I was right all along and you actually agree with me. Certain universities are better to go to than others, its a fact. Some universities are crap and have shoddy professors and don't prepare you for the field etc. Now I'm not saying going to a university automatically makes another smarter or anything, but it's just a fact of life that the guy who has a Ph.D. from Harvard is going to look a little better than the guy who has a Ph.D. from Pheonix University alright. I mean come on dude, let's just be realistic here. Did you get your alleged doctorate from a not so great institution and that's why you're all weird about this topic?

> Except the fat that everything we do know does...

Uh no we don't, exactly why we don't have a theory of everything lol this paradigm clearly has its limits and its becoming more and more apparent. Hence you have guys like Thomas Nagel (Ph.D., Harvard) showing just where the weakness are in his work Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False published on Oxford University Press in 2012.

> You can't ignore this and say because things are still unknown, that it is god. That argument has failed throughout history and is still invalid today. It is the god of the gaps argument again.

I'm not giving this argument at all. Gosh how many times do I have to tell you this? Stop with the script already and just listen for once.

  1. It's about degree of academic standing. Difficulty is subjective, buddy. I know a biologist with a Ph.D. from USC and the one class he almost failed in his undergrad years was art history. He struggled with the class immensely and needed a tutor while everyone else was breezing by. Meanwhile he's kiling it in biology and physics and everyone goes to him for help lol difficulty is subjective I'm afraid. Sorry ole bean.
  2. Oxford University is one of the greatest academic institutions in the world, it is globally ranked as top tier this is no secret. I trust Oxford's rankings rather than some random dude on the internet (that's you!).
  3. I don't see how this is about politics at all, it doesn't seem like 4 justifies that at all and I don't know how you got there. It seems this is too much for you handle so you had to cook up some political conspiracy to explain what you see in Oxford's rankings.
  4. Math is definitely not science. This isn't about my views its just a fact. The math department is NOT the science department. Have you even been to a university?? Science uses math, science utilizes assumptions in math and applies math and so forth, but is NOT mathematics itself.
  5. Again, difficulty is subjective. Though as we can see by Oxford's standards you're wrong. I'm not necessarily saying one degree is better than the other but that your rankings of degrees is contradicted by Oxford. You can disagree but then again you're just some random dude on the internet vs. Oxford University so yeah...

    > Except you have you claim to know he is real,

    Nope never made that claim ever.

    > you claim that you can know him if you believe in him

    Never said this either.

    > you claim to know how he thinks

    Never said this as well.

    > you claim a lot of knowledge about an unknowable being.

    And I also didn't make this claim. You're just following your script again...

    > If he were truly unknowable, everything you have said has to be false, as you don't know. Which is our point, you don't know.

    You clearly didn't check out the links I provided earlier regarding the essence-energies distinction.

    > There is something to know, but you would not be able to tell us, so what you say is nothing more than made up.

    That's just plain ole invalid. Your conclusion doesn't follow here. If there was something I knew that couldn't be communicated it wouldn't imply that's made up. Please check out the material I gave on the essence-energies distinction.
u/jschoolcraft · 1 pointr/freelance

ReWork is a good read, but I'm not sure it's what OP is asking for...

I'd look into Michael Port's Book Yourself Solid.

He talks about a "Red Velvet Rope Policy". It's basically:

  • Determine what inspires you >
  • You’ll love what you do >
  • You’ll do a better job at it >
  • You’ll create more customer value and satisfaction >
  • You’ll build a foundation of more loyal and profitable customers
u/omaca · 8 pointsr/Fantasy

Well, perhaps the most famous, and certainly the most influential, is the Dying Earth series by Jack Vance. Not only are the original books by Vance still available, but there was also a recent anthology by many famous SF authors set in the same milieu.

Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun is the next most famous work. Amazing stuff and highly recommended.

I can also recommend Hiero's Journey (and its sequel) as perfect examples of what you're looking for. One catch, though, is that these are out of print now. Very entertaining if you can find them (second hand copies available easily enough online).

And of course there are the Shanara books.

u/lobster_johnson · 2 pointsr/asoiaf

I recommend Gene Wolfe's masterpiece The Book of the New Sun, easily my favourite fantasy work alongside AoIaF and LotR. Wolfe is not that well known about fantasy readers, but he deserves a top spot; Neil Gaiman calls him his hero.

The New Sun is wonderfully dense and complex, easily as complex as ASoIaF. The writing is superb (at a much higher literary level than Martin), with plenty of violence and darkness and weirdness. It starts out deceptively like a straight-faced sword and sorcery novel, and then it gets… complicated. It's notable for deconstructing traditional sword-and-sorcery fantasy and turning the heroic epic on its head. It's fairly gritty, and deals with amorality in a way which can be off-putting to some. Its plot is positively panoramic, spanning a huge amount of time. It even has a bit of apparent time travel, in a good way.

It's a single novel, comes in five volumes (with hoary cover art, just ignore it) plus an extra volume written later that is not mandatory reading. If you like New Sun, Wolfe has two series set in the same universe that could be considered sequels, and which together comprise a sort of thematic trilogy about the nature of identity and narrative.

u/josephsmidt · 6 pointsr/ReasonableFaith

> Are atheist borrowing from the Christian worldview?

Yes! And hear's how: theists philosophers since Plato and Aristotle have painstakingly done the hard work to show that logic, morality and even science are justified in a theistic framework. However, most atheists just assume/adopt this same logic, morality and science without going back and painstakingly working out if atheism can justify these same hallmarks of theism.

One reason they are wrong to assume is the much of the greatest philosophers of all time have admitted materialistic atheism cannot justify these things, from Nietzsche to Kant to recently Nagel. (So this is not an isolated admission) Nietzsche even went so far as to confess:

> only if we assume a God who is morally our like can “truth” and the search for truth be at all something meaningful and promising of success. This God left aside, the question is permitted whether being deceived is not one of the conditions of life.

So yes, atheists just adopt while being ignorant of their own worldview's incompatibility with these principles that can be justified by theism. But ignorance is bliss I guess. :)

u/neodiogenes · 2 pointsr/reddit.com

Ok, possibly secret nugget of awesome: Tad Williams' Otherland series. Starts off fairly slow but when it gets going, you're in for a good, long ride, as there are four books in the series, each with nearly 1000 pages.

Also, Connie Willis has a clever, almost frenetic writing style that I really enjoy. I particularly liked To Say Nothing of the Dog but she has a number of novels that involve her own particular take on time travel.

An older classic that not everyone reads, Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun. Like Frank Herbert, Wolfe definitely writes for adults, and also like Herbert it's hard to say whether what he has to say is really significant or if he's just pulling philosophy from his ass.

u/QNIA42Gf7zUwLD6yEaVd · 2 pointsr/canada

Just to make it easier to find - it's spelled "Pierre Berton", not "Burton". Also, "Hostages to Fortune" was written by Peter C. Newman, not Pierre Berton (more about Newman below).

Here's Berton's list of books.

Some great foundational stuff about Canada is as /u/MonotheistThrowaway describes, in the 1812 things. There's also other stuff by him that's excellent:

"The National Dream" and "The Last Spike", about the construction of the railroad across Canada.

"The Great Depression", which of course is about the Great Depression.

"Vimy", which is about the Canadians at Vimy Ridge in 1917. It's not especially "scholarly", but it's incredibly accessible and a riveting read.

"The Arctic Grail", which is about the many attempts to find the North-West Passage. See also the Stan Rogers song about this. It's a pretty key piece of Canadian history.

There is lots and lots more in his bibliography. If you go out of your mind and decide to read all of his work, you'll probably know more about Canadian history and identity that 95% of those born here.

Peter Newman wrote similarly great Canadian history. He did a three-volume piece about the Hudson Bay Company, in the books Company of Adventurers, Caesars of the Wilderness and Merchant Princes. There's a sort of a "condensed" version called "Empire of the Bay" that might be a quicker read.

If you ever get bored of reading but you still want to learn Canada's history, check out "Canada: A People's History", an incredible series done by CBC back in 2001. That's a link to a playlist with all episodes. I can't possibly recommend it enough.

Edit to add: Welcome to Canada, friend!

u/khufumen · 1 pointr/DebateReligion

Keep in mind that the vast majority of the comments here are from staunch materialists who rely on the evidence of their 5 senses and seek to explain phenomena in terms of natural physical laws Atheism has nothing to say about consciousness but contrary to popular opinion there are many atheists who see consciousness as a property existing independent of what the 5 senses can describe and which must be accounted for in any theory of reality. A great and erudite book on this subject is Thomas Nagel's Mind and Cosmos.

>The physical sciences can describe organisms like ourselves as parts of the objective spatio-temporal order – our structure and behavior in space and time – but they cannot describe the subjective experiences of such organisms or how the world appears to their different particular points of view. There can be a purely physical description of the neurophysiological processes that give rise to an experience, and also of the physical behavior that is typically associated with it, but such a description, however complete, will leave out the subjective essence of the experience – how it is from the point of view of its subject — without which it would not be a conscious experience at all. Even though the theistic outlook, in some versions, is consistent with the available scientific evidence, I don’t believe it, and am drawn instead to a naturalistic, though non-materialist, alternative. Mind, I suspect, is not an inexplicable accident or a divine and anomalous gift but a basic aspect of nature that we will not understand until we transcend the built-in limits of contemporary scientific orthodoxy.

u/minerva_qw · 1 pointr/booksuggestions

Hands down, The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe. It's actually a series of four books (The Shadow of the Torturer, The Claw of the Conciliator, The Sword of the Lictor and The Citadel of the Autarch) following Severian the Torturer after he is banished from his guild for showing mercy to one of their "clients."

It's just...beautiful and complex and you'll discover something new and fascinating each time you read it. The tetralogy has been ranked on par with the works of Tolkein and has been recognized all the major sci-fi awards, and gained wider literary recognition as well. See the editorial reviews section on the linked Amazon pages:

>"Outstanding...A major work of twentieth-century American literature." --The New York Times Book Review

>"Wonderfully vivid and inventive...the most extraordinary hero in the history of the heroic epic." --Washington Post Book World

>"Brilliant...terrific...a fantasy so epic it beggars the mind. An extraordinary work of art!" --Philadelphia Inquirer

>About the Author: Gene Wolfe has been called "the finest writer the science fiction world has yet produced" by The Washington Post. A former engineer, he has written numerous books and won a variety of awards for his SF writing.

Anyway...yeah, I kind of like these books.

EDIT: A Canticle For Liebowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr. is great, too. It's kind of post post apocalyptic, and it examines the self destructive nature of humanity.

u/keitamaki · 3 pointsr/learnmath

This falls into the branch of mathematics called Group Theory. If you think about it, your question has nothing to do with matrices, but instead is just a question about permutations.

You can ignore the matrix structure of your 2x2 matrix and just think about permutations of four elements (abcd). There are 24 permutations and the collection of permutations forms a Group (called S4, or the Symmetric Group on 4 elements).

S4 (in fact any symmetric group) can be generated by just two elements -- an element that permutes exactly two items, and an element that cycles all 4 items

So, for instance, from the permutation that sends (abcd) to (bacd) and the permutation that sends (abcd) to (bcda) you can generate all permutations. Note that you have to use a cycle here (something like a->b->c->d->a, or a->c->d->b->a)

Group Theory is a huge topic, but was originally developed to study questions about permutations.

You can read more about Symmetric Groups here http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SymmetricGroup.html or here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetric_group but if you've never been exposed to Group Theory at all, then those references may be a bit dense. If you're interested, I'd recommend you start with with something like https://www.amazon.com/Groups-Symmetry-Undergraduate-Texts-Mathematics/dp/0387966757 It starts out with (almost) your exact example -- the symmetries of the tetrahedron. Note that a tetrahedron has 4 sides, so every time you rotate (or flip inside-out) a tetrahedron, you're just permuting the 4 sides. It's not quite the same as your example because you can't get all 24 permutations of the 4 sides by rotating and flipping -- you only get 12 of them. The group of those 12 permutations is called A4 (or the Alternating Group on 4 elements). It is a sub-group of S4 (the one you are interested in).

u/k-sci · 1 pointr/The_Donald

I'm a scientist and former atheist and thought the theory of evolution was simple unassailable overwhelming science. When I became a Christian I continued to have that belief, but curious about the young earth creationism (YEC) I took a couple short courses on YEC. Both were compete and utter garbage. Then I went on to study down into the science-based and philosophical-basis for intelligent design or rejection of neo Darwinism, in come cases written by atheists such as this one by Nagal. Without an aim to persuade you to accept my religious beliefs, it would be interesting to talk to you about the major problems there are with Neo Darwinism, many of which are now becoming recognized by evolutionary biologists. I don't conclude that Neo Darwinism is utterly false, but I'm convinced it is at least incomplete.

Cheers!

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/askphilosophy

Thomas Nagel (a very capable philosopher, in my opinion) has a book coming out soon that you might find interesting. I haven't read it, as it's not out yet, but I've pre-ordered it and eagerly await its arrival. His fairly-famous article, What is it like to be a bat?, might also be of interest to you.

u/Temujin_123 · 4 pointsr/mormon

> Truth is verifiable claims, I consider anything else fiction along the lines of harry potter

How about that claim itself? Is the idea that truth is only things that are empirically verifiable itself empirically verifiable? That's logical positivism which is empirically non-verifiable.


> I also reject metaphysical and supernatural claims

I can honestly respect that. It bothers me when people think that those who don't believe in God or the existence of supernatural things are somehow just ignorant. They may be (since there are convincing reasons to believe in God), but it's not something to hang someone's intelligence on (since there are reasons not to believe in God). And the same goes for the belief in metaphysics, belief in it does not imply ignorance.

As for metaphysics/supernatural things, I've found a lot of insight on the topic from these resources:

u/soulekar · 3 pointsr/AskReddit

One of my all time favorite authors is a guy named Gene Wolfe. I don't know or honestly care what anyone else thinks about him, I find his writing imaginative and super creative while still being still understanding that there are limits even in a fantasy world.

LINK to a book: http://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Claw-First-Half-Book/dp/0312890176/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_3

u/cpt_bongwater · 4 pointsr/books

it might be based on the fact that The Book of The New Sun is the greatest fantasy/Sci/fi Novel written since Tolkien. (IMO, of course)

But his other work can be hit or miss. I've found the short stories to be good as is the novel Peace. But if you haven't read Book of the New Sun...1st of all I'm Jealous, and second of all don't even bother with his other works until you've finished it.


Shadow & Claw--1st Book Of The New Sun

u/thetasine · 3 pointsr/AskReddit

Yeah! Gene Wolfe's series The Book of the New Sun is a great read. It has some very, very interesting uses of language, almost archaic in tone and meaning, but reads almost like poetry sometimes. I recommend it, probably one of the most re-read books on my bookshelf.

First half
Second half


u/2ysCoBra · 1 pointr/askphilosophy

After flirting with nihilism and existentialism for a long time I, personally, came to the conclusion that the notion that all of this is here without any sort of explanation or without any direction or purpose runs directly against common human intuition. It seems to me to be a belief on par with properly basic beliefs such as the reality of the past, reality of the external world, etc. Perhaps it's a step up, and not quite that basic, but I digress.

Now, some (see Thomas Nagal's "Mind & Cosmos") argue for natural teleology, in which purpose is inherently embedded in the universe and does not need a transcendent mind such as God to give it purpose. Personally, I agree with a very hefty amount of Nagal's positions, but find his critique of the theistic explanation lacking.

For a theistic perspective on the issue, I highly recommend William Lane Craig's following article and podcast episode that addresses this.

u/Hyperbolicflow · 5 pointsr/math

Weyl's symmetry is what you're looking for. The next step up from this would require some group theory, since mathematicians interested in symmetry usually study symmetry groups of objects or spaces. I have not read it but this book looks like a good next read, at least the first four(ish) chapters. Another possibility is Armstrong's book, though I'm not familiar with this book either.

u/redditorInIreland · 2 pointsr/books

No.

I adored the earlier Dune books, and was excited for the prequels.
The new writing style is very odd, and you can tell when the authors each wrote alternate chapters. Neither of them seemed to grasp the same grand scale and ancient feeling that FH did to the originals. The settings, characters and plot lack any of the mystery, excitement or depth that the originals had. Notwithstanding the Dune universe setting, they aren't great sci-fi books either.

I read the first with mounting despair, I read the second and abandoned the series. I didn't buy the third or any others. Perhaps they improved an astonishing amount in each subsequent release, but it wasn't worth finding out for me.

For ancient world and conflict sci-fi that introduces deep ideas and has interesting prose, try: Gene Wolfe and his Book of the New Sun series: http://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Claw-First-Half-Book/dp/0312890176/ref=pd_sim_b_6

I also like the epic scale of Dan Simmons - Hyperion and Ilium series are good, though quite unlike Dune.

u/thesecretbarn · 1 pointr/books

If the author is any good at all you'll pick it up from context without having to think too much about it.

If you like that sort of thing, check out The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe. He uses some really wonderful and obscure vocabulary to begin with, and is inventing an entirely new world at the same time. Half the time you're not sure if he made up a word or if you just don't know it yet.

u/PleasingToTheTongue · 2 pointsr/Fantasy_Bookclub

Shadow & Claw: The First Half of 'The Book of the New Sun' - Gene Wolfe

pretty awesome book. i just got into this and i'm really liking where it's going. It follows this torturer from a torture guild who got banished for showing mercy to one of this victims.

u/punninglinguist · 6 pointsr/printSF

Have you read The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe? It's got all the attributes you mention, and it's widely considered to be one of the best pieces of writing ever to come out of science fiction. Extremely subtle, extremely dark, has a good claim for featuring the fullest single character in science fiction altogether.

u/rarelyserious · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

You want to challenge me?! That's fine, but I return a challenge with a challenge.

Gene Wolfe's, The Book of the New Sun, Part 1 and Part 2.

These will make you work as a reader. You'll have to reread passages, and you will not fully understand the story on one read through (I've done it 3 times so far). However, the payoff for reading these is HUGE. The man is an absolute master of his craft.

u/TangPauMC · 2 pointsr/booksuggestions

The best books for you I think are going to be Gene Wolfe's "Book of the New Sun" series. It is very good dark fantasy post apocalyptic work. Very developed and dark world. Such a great writer The first two books are collected in one trade paperback.
https://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Claw-First-Half-Book/dp/0312890176

u/beelzebubs_avocado · 1 pointr/VeryBadWizards

Unless you like dense but vague prose with no obvious application, I can't recommend this one, at least from the beginning in the free kindle sample: https://www.amazon.com/Mind-Cosmos-Materialist-Neo-Darwinian-Conception/dp/0199919755/ref=la_B000AQ6R56_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1520986930&sr=1-1

But the first taste is free and YMMV. There are lots of blurbs from prestigious publications so go figure.

u/rocketsocks · 2 pointsr/booksuggestions

The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe. It's not for the faint of heart, it's extremely literary, but it's good reading.

u/Epetaizana · 1 pointr/sales

I always felt this book gave me an advantage both in sales and in other social settings:

The Nonverbal Advantage: Secrets and Science of Body Language at Work

ISBN-10: 1576754928

ISBN-13: 978-1576754924

Cheers!

*Edit for URL

u/Eko_Mister · 1 pointr/books

Forever Peace - Haldeman

Book of The New Sun/Book of the Long Sun - Wolfe (this is a very rewarding story, but it requires commitment)

Never Let Me Go - Ishiguro

The Sparrow - Russell

Please be aware that these are all fairly dark. Maybe I'm soft, but The Sparrow was one of the roughest books I've read, from a psychological perspective.

u/JayRedEye · 8 pointsr/Fantasy

Start with Shadow & Claw.

Sword & Citadel is the second half of The Book of the New Sun.

If you would like to continue on through the rest of the overall Solar Cycle, it is Urth of the New Sun, Book of the Long Sun and Book of the Short Sun. There are omnibus editions available, you can see them all here.

Also, The Fifth Head of Cerberus is arguably a prequel to the series, and either way is well worth a read. And if you want to dig even deeper, Castle of Days has Gene Wolfe discussing BotNS as well as a bunch of other short stories.

See? Not confusing at all...

u/Sich_befinden · 1 pointr/philosophy

You seem to be suggesting some kind of creative evolution, which, despite its unpopularity, can have some strong arguments for it. If you're up for any reading, and curious about this idea and where the support from it comes from, I'd read Nagel's Mind & Cosmos, Bergson's Creative Evolution, or Scheler's The Human Place in the Cosmos.

u/Teggus · 2 pointsr/pics

You're welcome. If you are interested in the follow up to that series, On Blue's Waters is the story of the settlers that leave the generation ship (to settle the planet Blue).

There is a kind of related series, the Book of the New Sun, which describes the ending of history and conditions of the world they left behind.

u/tandem7 · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Just finished reading Stormdancer, which I loved - can't wait to grab the second one in the series when it comes out in September.

On my to-read list:

The Book of the New Sun, which /u/rarelyserious recommended I give a try, and MaddAddam.

u/window_latch · 2 pointsr/Buddhism

I think if you're interested in this topic Nagel's Mind and Cosmos would be essential to read. It's addressing an idea that what you're interested in is sitting on -- probably an at least partially unexamined assumption. It's more in the realm of philosophy of science rather than examples of science.

u/NYCWallCrawlr · 5 pointsr/askphilosophy

I would suggest: Mind & Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False by Thomas Nagel.

Here is the first few paragraphs of the summary/synopsis excerpt from Amazon if you are interested:

>The modern materialist approach to life has conspicuously failed to explain such central mind-related features of our world as consciousness, intentionality, meaning, and value. This failure to account for something so integral to nature as mind, argues philosopher Thomas Nagel, is a major problem, threatening to unravel the entire naturalistic world picture, extending to biology, evolutionary theory, and cosmology.

>
>Since minds are features of biological systems that have developed through evolution, the standard materialist version of evolutionary biology is fundamentally incomplete. And the cosmological history that led to the origin of life and the coming into existence of the conditions for evolution cannot be a merely materialist history, either. An adequate conception of nature would have to explain the appearance in the universe of materially irreducible conscious minds, as such.

>
>Nagel's skepticism is not based on religious belief or on a belief in any definite alternative. In Mind and Cosmos, he does suggest that if the materialist account is wrong, then principles of a different kind may also be at work in the history of nature, principles of the growth of order that are in their logical form teleological rather than mechanistic.

>
>In spite of the great achievements of the physical sciences, reductive materialism is a world view ripe for displacement. Nagel shows that to recognize its limits is the first step in looking for alternatives, or at least in being open to their possibility.

And on Thomas Nagel, per Wikipedia:

>Thomas Nagel is an American philosopher. He is University Professor of Philosophy and Law, Emeritus, at New York University,[1] where he taught from 1980 to 2016.[2] His main areas of philosophical interest are legal philosophy, political philosophy, and ethics.[3]
>
>Nagel is well known for his critique of material reductionist accounts of the mind, particularly in his essay "What Is it Like to Be a Bat?" (1974), and for his contributions to deontological and liberal moral and political theory in The Possibility of Altruism (1970) and subsequent writings. He continued the critique of reductionism in Mind and Cosmos (2012), in which he argues against the neo-Darwinian view of the emergence of consciousness.

A highly interesting and influential work on consciousness, which seems to be exactly what you're looking for. Let me know what you think!

u/IgnoreYourDoctor · 1 pointr/asoiaf

Book of the New Sun. Dense, awesome allegorical sci/fi-fantasy. Its my first read through and I'm already hooked.

Before that I read Pohl's Gateway and American Gods. Cannot recommend Gateway enough.

u/Underthepun · 24 pointsr/Catholicism

I am about to fall asleep but wanted to link you to old post of mine where I discuss this. I am a former skeptical nihilist atheist myself. It isn't just a miserable philosophy (though I wasn't really all that miserable as one), but it is utterly anti-intellectual and just flat wrong. Even atheist philosopher Thomas Nagel says so. But it takes a lot of reading, study, prayer, and grace for these truths to reveal themselves to you. Please be patient and trust in him.

u/getElephantById · 1 pointr/booksuggestions

I don't know if this is still a big deal, but a few years ago it was all about The Lean Startup by Eric Ries (spanish paperback edition) (kindle edition). I work with startups all the time, and the terminology is definitely part of the nomenclature now. I don't usually read these sorts of books, but I read this one and it was fairly reasonable.

u/tinyhouseireland · 2 pointsr/utopiatv

The recent version by Orb is pretty good. There's an incredible version by Centipede Press but it's only a few thousand dollars! If something gets published by Centipede that's a definite clue to quality.

It comes in two books (it's a teratology - four books in 2 physical volumes - a bit confusing to the book buyer to be honest)

https://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Claw-First-Half-Book/dp/0312890176

https://www.amazon.com/Sword-Citadel-Second-Half-Book/dp/0312890184

u/NumbZebra · 2 pointsr/digitalnomad

Not me personally. I can't vouch for anything in this book, but it was an interesting read.

http://www.amazon.com/Live-Margin-Patrick-Schulte/dp/0578116642

First found the book from an interview on the radical personal finance podcast.

https://radicalpersonalfinance.com/145-brilliant-market-timing-or-pure-serendipity-interview-with-nick-okelly-co-author-of-live-on-the-margin/

u/eaturbrainz · 1 pointr/HPMOR

>I don't plan to continue this thread much further - this isn't a terribly good time or place to summarise a first year moral philosophy textbook for you, nor would doing so benefit you in the same way that reading that textbook and thinking about it would.

Weird you should drop into Condescending Philosophy Major Mode, because we're actually agreeing vehemently on everything of substance.

>There is no "moral reality" in the way that there are atoms or energy levels or other physical things.

Not quite. We haven't found one when we've investigated. It's worth remembering that even at the time of the Enlightenment, the field of moral philosophy started with a mixture of divine command and natural-law as its "informed priors" (the frame for its questions). Darwinian evolution dealt a major blow to natural-law/natural-teleology theories, as well.

The finding that we cannot locate an "atom of morality" or a universal optimization target (at least, one that fits our moral intuitions better than the Second Law of Thermodynamics) is a posteriori. Unfortunately, some people drop into Condescending Philosophy Major Mode and insist that their moral intuitions have so much epistemic value that naturalism must be completely wrong.

And these people have tenure!

>Yet almost everyone lives by some kind of moral code,

Well yes, of course.

>and almost everyone thinks something rather nice has happened over the last few hundred years as we drove back ignorance, racism, sexism, slavery, oppression and so forth.

With emphasis on the almost. There are still serious moral philosophers who may like modernity, but take positions that are technically opposed to it.

>Arguably civilisation couldn't work at all unless most people most of the time followed moral rules, or if it could work there would be massive overheads in policing everyone.

It also requires massive policing overheads when you try to run it very, shall we say, wickedly. It shouldn't be too unsupported to assert that nice rulers require more police than mean rulers.

>So how do we justify moral beliefs in a universe that hasn't been so kind as to give us an atom of evil or a wavelength of sin or anything similar? Well, if you want the long version then study moral philosophy. The very short version is we just make something up, or we do something reasonably sophisticated with game theory to get to a very similar place assuming self-interested agents capable of big picture thinking.

Yes, this is exactly what I said. We can take an anti-realist stance ("make something up"), or we can take a very sophisticated, reforming sort of realist stance that involves precise naturalistic grounding (game theory and psychology are aspects of nature too, you know).

But in either case, the Is/Ought Gap, or Moore's Open Question Argument in its other form, are simply not Hard Problems in the sense of demonstrating that the gap is impossible to bridge. In the a-posteriori absence of mystical moral particles, morality is left amenable to natural, empirical investigation via very precise theories of which empirical facts count as moral facts (or via outright anti-realism, which denies that there exists any gap between normative ethics and moral psychology, and thus denies the normativity of ethics in general). The problem is that some trained, professional academic philosophers remain actually committed to the position that the strength of their realist intuitions constitutes evidence against naturalism, or attempt to rationalize ways in which naturalism self-undermines.

u/theavatare · 1 pointr/stocks

I would read this book to learn some good stories on personal financial management click!

u/ryanbugg · 6 pointsr/instructionaldesign

Are you talking about staff training? I’m a big fan of Bob Mager’s Six Pack and Tom Gilbert’s Human Competence. I come from a more behavioral side of ID, though... which is something I rarely see represented on here.

https://www.amazon.com/New-Mager-Six-Pack-Robert-F/dp/187961815X

https://www.amazon.com/Human-Competence-Engineering-Worthy-Performance/dp/0787996157/ref=mp_s_a_1_fkmr1_1?keywords=tom+gilbert+human+competence&qid=1562848027&s=gateway&sr=8-1-fkmr1

u/Spotted_Blewit · 2 pointsr/collapse

Perhaps this will help to explain where I am coming from. I take the Hard Problem of Consciousness very seriously, and believe it has implications for materialistic neo-Darwinism that are extremely important. In terms of scientific importance, this is on the same scale as relativity and QM displacing Newtonian physics. It's massive.

Explained in this book: r/https://www.amazon.co.uk/Mind-Cosmos-Materialist-Neo-Darwinian-Conception/dp/0199919755

Now, if Nagel is right, and I firmly agree that he is, then there's a big question mark about whether evolution on Earth has been somehow teleological - that evolution was "always destined" to produce conscious beings, even if this teleology is "natural" rather than being the result of "intelligent design". Now also take into account the possibility that the cosmos is in fact potentially infinite, and that unobserved bits of it might be in a permanent superposition (ie they don't really exist - they don't become finite - until observed).

The picture I am painting here is one that is completely compatible with modern science, but in the context of a radically different metaphysical setup to the deterministic, materialistic one that currently prevails. And it has implications for the question we're discussing here, because if Nagel is right then the idea that life may only exist on Earth and nowhere else suddenly looks a lot more plausible. And what is key for this discussion is that this change in plausibility is the result of a change in metaphysical context rather than scientific data.

u/GSto · 3 pointsr/programming

I'd recommend Book Yourself Solid. I am also working on a longer book that has a few chapters about sales and marketing.

u/pineappletrauma · -3 pointsr/DebateReligion

You may like this book by Thomas Nagel: https://www.amazon.com/Mind-Cosmos-Materialist-Neo-Darwinian-Conception/dp/0199919755/

He describes the unity of the self as something so obviously true that materialism can't be true.

u/iamiamwhoami · 2 pointsr/datascience

I agree this question doesn't really belong in this subreddit, but maybe try checking out a book on survey design http://www.amazon.com/Designing-Conducting-Survey-Research-Comprehensive/dp/078797546X, or posting to a psychology subreddit. Also maybe include some details about the survey and what you're trying to show.

u/Priff · 5 pointsr/genewolfe

I have no idea what the French translation is like, but I usually feel that a lot is lost in translation with normal books, and with Wolfe where the specific wording is very important to be able to read between the lines or get the subtext I'd doubt that a translation works well.

But you can get them used very cheap off amazon.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/0312890184/ref=ox_sc_act_image_1?smid=A23PVFCGFE1326&psc=1

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/0312890176/ref=ox_sc_act_image_2?smid=A7CL6GT0UVQKS&psc=1

There's several different edition, some are in four books. Most are in two, there's even a couple of omnibus versions. Used paperbacks on amazon sometimes go as low as £0.01 plus shipping, and shipping is not that expensive within Europe, especially if you can find all the books from the same seller and get a discount on shipping.

u/DaSilence · 4 pointsr/ProtectAndServe

We spent an entire semester on it in grad school.

There are people with PhD's in it.

I don't think I can summarize the results in a reddit reply.

Go forth and educate yourself:

Understanding Survey Design and Data

Understanding Opinion Polls

u/greatsouledsam · 2 pointsr/Fantasy

My first reaction is that it reminds me of Gene Wolfe's The Book of the New Sun

u/1066443507 · 2 pointsr/askphilosophy

You might look at Nagel's Mind and Cosmos.

u/George_Glass · 7 pointsr/scifi

Last week, I bought both Anathem and Wolfe's The Book of the New Sun and decided on the latter to start reading last night. I'm not sure either book is appropriate for pre-bedtime reading when I'm starting to doze off as they both seem to require attentive reading... I think I need some brain candy for the late night reads.

u/Treeclimber3 · 2 pointsr/MGTOW

A sci-fi book from 2004; centuries in the future on a planet called Vanar. Guy gets left stranded by an ex on her home planet where women wield all economic, political and technological power. Not an entirely bad book, if for no other reason than as a cautionary tale.

https://www.amazon.com/Master-None-N-Lee-Wood/dp/0446693049/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1523306149&sr=1-3&keywords=master+of+none

u/FM79SG · 2 pointsr/philosophy

> Things are made of behaviors that are made of behaviors

Well this claim is disputable. One might simply reply that science only observes behaviors but has a blind spot on ontological reality. This was a criticism even Russel (and others) raised.

.

>I am pointing out that substance and accidents is a terrible way to describe the world

Terrible why? It highlights the world in a very different way... which might not fit the narrow mechanistic vision we all try to fit everything now, but there is no reason to think such mechanistic view is true, in fact there are good reasons to think it's not correct. Thomas Nagel (not a religious guy at all) presents a good case in his book Mind and Cosmos 1


.

>That distinction doesn't exist. There is no such thing a tree with a tendency to grow. The tendency of parts to grow and behave is the tree. The tree is the tendency, the behavior. Trees are the dynamic result of large scale movements that are the result of small scale movements. There are not separately substances and accidents - there is only one thing, not two. This dualistic idea is wrong because reality is mono. We do not have objects over here and properties of them over there. We do not have trees and their color, or the trees and their behavior separately.


Again you seem confused.
First I think it's pretty clear that the distinction between a table and a tree does exist, since tree grow, but tables are something that are necessarily imposed by humans on a tree.

You are trying to see some sort of dualism here which I am not describing, but definitively that "things = behavior" is a doubtful one. This in fact already breakdown if you think of animals and humans - unless you go the "Dennett route" thinking consciousness is just illusion (and that raises a whole lot more problems)
.

>That is why gold as a "collection of particles" is a substance, but gold nuggets isn't.

This is my mistake, I meant a "pile of nuggets" or something imposed on gold

>Again, I think this is a false distinction. If I gave you a chunk of metal, you couldn't cut down a tree with it. The axe's arrangement and the chunk's arrangement are very similar, and so they behave similar, but the axe has some causal powers that a chunk does not, and giving it a wood handle changes those further. An axe is composed of its parts, but it also does not behave as its individual bits would behave. Any unique arrangement of matter has unique causal powers.

We can agree on the last point you make but the difference is that again an axe structure is imposed externally on the substances.

The "behavior" to be an axe, is not something that exists in metal and wood itself, but something that is imposed on them and that's the difference.

.

>Arrangements are a convenient way of talking, but really nothing about that axe is holding still in a static position - the axe is a dance steel, and the steel is a dance of many different elements, that are dances, all the way down. Get enough steel in one place and hot enough, and it will glow and churn and produce a magnetic dynamo and continental plates on its surface. That is a very different set of causal powers of the axe, and yet they are made of the same steel. Get it hot enough, and it fuses into heavier elements. The macroscopic arrangment of things can force changes at smaller levels.

Yes arrangements are a conveninet way of talking, ans substance theory does not deny that.

And yes, again no disagreement here, the axe has many causal powers beyond that of an axe imposed purpose.. .and such causal powers derive from the powers of the substances the axe is made of.
.

>Don't confuse the map for the terrain. Our mathematical constructs of fields is an attempt to describe reality, but it is reality that is real, of course. That said, quantum field theory is a really close fit. A field is just something that can have a wiggle in it. We know there are wiggles, so we give it a field to wiggle in, but we aren't sure if it is even made of anything. Every thing you consider to be stationary and solid is a dance of dances of dances of wiggles.

Well technically a "field" is a mathematical idea.
A field is any set of elements that satisfies the field axioms for both addition and multiplication and is a commutative division algebra.

A field is called such because centuries ago gravity and electromagnetism were described mathematically as vector fields and now they are still described as such (but not mere vector see, gravity for example is a tensor field).

The "field view" seems to reflect what we observe experimentally, but this does not mean necessarily it is ontologically true and more importantly there are some problems (e.g. the Cosmological constant prediction) that clearly indicate that the theory is missing something...


Right about 120 years ago scientists thought their physical view of the world was complete and done - they even told Max Planck he should not get into theoretical physics because there was nothing to do there - but boy they were wrong on so many levels.

I think it's important to realize mathematical descriptions might work even if they do not actually reflect ontological reality.

.......

In any case, we do not have to agree. If you want know more about substance theory and essentualism I'd recommend David S. Oderberg's "Real Essentialism"

In fact Oderberg can explain (and defend) this much better than I could ever do.

u/Honey_Llama · 0 pointsr/DebateReligion

See Thomas Nagel Mind & Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False. Nagel is a world class philosopher of the mind and a staunch atheist. This is not punting to theism to explain evidential gaps in science. It addresses an intractable problem for the physical science of the mind which no amount of evidence can resolve. Hence my repeated refrain, "exhaustive physicalistic description."

Please engage with the actual arguments instead of trotting out tired slogans.

u/KingTommenBaratheon · 10 pointsr/changemyview

I'd like to suggest this book to you. It's a controversial work by a very famous and well-regarded philosopher. He lays out a case for the view that Darwinian evolutionary theory is at best incomplete, and that a materialist conception of the universe is inadequate to explain some data (e.g. the subjective character of consciousness). The book is very controversial but, if you feel that you've a good handle on the theory of evolution, you should probably read it for yourself and make up your own mind rather than reading a review/response piece. At worst you get an interesting introduction to some of the problems that evolutionary theorists are grappling with today.

EDIT: I should clarify something for the sake of your topic. Theories rarely fall on the basis of how well they deal with the cases that the theory was specifically developed to explain. Evolution, for example, was developed as a theory for explaining apparent trends among the diversity of life on Earth. It does this well, most think, in that it adequately explains all the data that you mention. Where evolutionary theory will run into hiccups - as most do - is in dealing with new explananda ('things to explain'). Newtonian mechanics were largely abandoned in the light of new observational evidence (e.g. new astronomical observations). If Darwinian evolution will face a serious challenge it's likely going to come from a new datum.

u/CrosseyedAndPainless · 2 pointsr/scifi

Sorry about that.

Also, maybe Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun?

It's set on Earth in the far far distant future when civilization has fallen to a mostly fallen to a medieval level, but lives amid the ruins of a far greater technologies. There's one tantalizing mystery after another. Though Wolfe's habit of never exactly giving a straight answer to those mysteries is fun and frustrating at the same time.

u/Autarch_Severian · 1 pointr/worldbuilding

Read the Book of the New Sun.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0312890176/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_dp_ss_1?pf_rd_p=1944687562&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=0671540661&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=1JY83WG1BDB71T8N2JH9

This is basically what you're talking about... I didn't know it was sci-fi until about a hundred pages in (though I'll admit I'm a history nerd and was kind of willfully ignoring sly sci-fi references to preserve a 16th-century setting).

u/YoungModern · 7 pointsr/DebateCommunism

>Science doesn't explain everything

Nor should it even purport to, because not all knowledge is scientific knowledge. That's called scientism, and pretty much every philosopher and plenty of scientists reject it as an absurd, and indeed pseudoscientific propostion.

>I just think that materialism is a slippery slope

Slippery slopes are a slippery slope to bad arguments, usually straw-men. If you're going to arguing your case intelligently, I suggest they familiarise yourself with the intelligent propenents of what you are seeking to criticise.

First of all, materialism has been dead and for over a century and displaced by physicalism and neutral monism, the latter view also being held be theists, pantheists/pandeists like William James (who wrote The Varieties of Religious Experience, and atheists like a Bertrand Russell, David Chalmers, and Thomas Nagel of "What is it like to be a bat?" and Mind & Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False fame. Then there are still idealists who are ontological naturalists like Hegel, as well as atheists like Schopenhauer. For supernatural theist idealists, I suggest you check out Charles Taylor, who is influenced by Marx, as well as the other communitarians.

There are also dualists who are atheists, like Jains who are so committed to non-violence that they refuse boil water because it might cause unnecessarily violence to bacteria and a practice a morality more demanding and rigorous than any Christian since Jesus, as well a certain atheistic conceptions of Buddhism.

There are many ways of seeing beyond the false dichotomy of you percieve as being on the top or the bottom of your metaphorical slipper slope which completely fails as comprehensive account of the multitude of views that billions of people hold, atheist and theist alike.

> humans are just sacks of meat and bones

Unfortunately the are plenty of angsty, philosophically ignorant r/atheists and their scientistic heros all too eager to play that role, but I don't have to look far for idiotic theists either.

>with no spirit or consciousness

Again, "spirit" is an assumption which simply by doesn't imply what you think it implies by necessity. Besides the examples above, pre-Babylonian exile Israelites had no concept of an immortal and immaterial soul, and assumed that death was oblivion until their contact with Persian and Greek philosophies.

As far as "no consciousness" goes, it should be obvious by now that hardly any philosophers agree with this. Listen Daniel Dennet's takedown of "atoms in the void" accounts of consciousness anti-realism over at philosophy bites or read one of his dozen or so books on the topic.

>you can't have a political revolution without a spiritual one

It's already been established that both political and spiritual revolutions have material antecedents. As for revolution we desire, that requires pardigm shift in mass consciousness, which, if you are not deterministic, may or may not require something like a "spiritual" revolution. Gramsci will fill you in on why it is so difficult for that to happen.

u/Curates · 3 pointsr/philosophy

> The only plausible explanation would be that the fish struggled onto land with it's fins due to a shortage of food in the water and the fins eventually changed into walkable stubs.

This is basically right. A missing link between fish with fins and "fish" with legs would have looked something like the mudfish. The fins do indeed evolve to function more like legs, and these animals then start to look more like lizards. The important thing to keep in mind about evolution is that these changes are really minuscule from generation to generation, but that these marginal changes eventually add up to large functional differences.

It seems like much of your argument revolves around a poor understanding of evolution, that it is somehow consciously directed. This is in fact not at all the case. There are several mechanisms through which adaptive changes in hereditary traits occur, and not one of which is conscious willing for bodily change. A quick glance at the wikipedia article on evolution should avail you of some of these misconceptions. I know that abiogenesis and evolution can seem mysterious, but it's actually not, and this really doesn't seem to be a good argument for incompatibilism. You might be interested in an argument that seems related, presented in Nagel's Mind and Cosmos, which argues that consciousness itself cannot be explained by evolution and the naturalistic world picture, determinism included. This argument is highly controversial and in my opinion not at all convincing, but it's there and Nagel presents it.