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  • A good book is a tool that operates on your mind.

  • It reshapes it by updating, adding, and removing concepts.

  • You see the world through your concepts, and when they change, the way you see the world

  • changes.

  • Recommending a book is like recommending a tool: it's impossible to do without knowing

  • the job a person is trying to accomplish.

  • Here are some principles that I use for selecting a book to read.

  • (1) Find a gripping question.

  • What's a mystery that you wish you could solve?

  • Really dig deep, and develop this question.

  • Write it all out if you need to.

  • What keeps you up at night?

  • Pose a hypothesis to the question; predict an answer.

  • Let the question be your guide.

  • Find books that grapple with it or ones that explore your hypothesis.

  • The writer's journey becomes your journey.

  • The book will give you new concepts and words to navigate towards an answer, a better question,

  • or a more refined hypothesis.

  • You'll find the book interesting and rewarding because you're the one that posed the question.

  • (2) A good book should teeter on the edge of what you do and don't know.

  • Science shows us that we learn most effectively when we build on top of what we already know.

  • A book on calculus will be meaningless if you've never studied the lower levels of

  • math.

  • A book is a tool: it needs something to work on.

  • By building new knowledge onto old, a good book allows you to expand beyond what you

  • once were.

  • It serves as a bridge between two versions of yourself.

  • (3) A good book should subject you to evolution.

  • A good book is like a hammer or a screwdriver: it has the capacity to destroy and dismantle,

  • but it also has the capacity to build, reconstruct, and augment.

  • It will destroy the weakest parts of you, retain the truest parts, and build stronger

  • parts on top of that.

  • How do you find a book that can destroy you and rebuild you in this way?

  • The easiest method is to find books that have survived the process of evolution themselves.

  • Books that have been around and praised by culture for a long time are often worth paying

  • attention to.

  • Culture has repeatedly decided that these concepts were worth preserving, so they must

  • be very adaptive or useful.

  • Another method is to find writers who subject their own ideas to evolution before putting

  • them into books.

  • They let time and experience kill off parts of the idea and allow for new parts to grow.

  • They make the idea adaptive and mold it into the shape of truth.

  • Isn't truth that which survives in any space and at any time?

  • Scientists are really good at this.

  • They take their theories and run them through empirical tests that allow them to be reshaped

  • by reality.

  • Ideally, their theories die and are reborn stronger and stronger every-time.

  • The works of a good scientist, philosopher, or artist are worth reading for this reason:

  • they've already been refined and subjected to evolution.

  • The final method would be to find books that can give you new experiences.

  • Experience a point of view that you never have before.

  • Step into someone else's shoes and subject yourself to their environment.

  • Examine the parts of you that hold up and the parts which crumble.

  • You may be surprised to find that ideas you believed to be true fall apart in a different

  • environment.

  • I think that following these principles will help you find books that will change your

  • life: (1) Find a question that grips you.

  • (2) Find a book that explores the question and teeters on the edge of what you do and

  • don't know.

  • (3) Find a book that has undergone a rigorous evolutionary process, so you can familiarize

  • yourself with ideas and concepts that won't die.

  • You guys have asked me for some book recommendations, but that's hard to do without knowing your

  • goals.

  • Instead, I'll put forward some questions that have been interesting to me and the corresponding

  • books that have helped me progress towards a clearer answer.

  • (1) What would happen if we had no emotions?

  • Descartes' Error by Antonio Damasio (2) How do emotions work?

  • How Emotions Are Made by Lisa Feldman Barrett

  • (3) What are the limits of the scientific method?

  • Black Swan by Nassim Taleb (4) Why is behaviour so hard to change?

  • Behave by Robert Sapolsky (5) Why are politics and religion so divisive?

  • The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Haidt (6) Is there more to life than pleasure or

  • happiness?

  • Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl (7) What might a world in which pleasure is

  • the highest good look like?

  • Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (8) What is man?

  • Homo Prospectus by Martin Seligman et al.

  • (9) What is personality?

  • How can I think about the self?

  • Who Are You, Really? by Brian R. Little (10) What is the nature of the culture that

  • I am surrounded in?

  • Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder (11) What truly matters at the end of life?

  • When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi

  • Now, I'm not saying any of these books contain the answers to these questions, but if you're

  • interested in these questions, you might like these books.

  • I believe it's better to chart your own path than to follow my own anyways.

  • As always, thanks for watching and I'll see you next time!

A good book is a tool that operates on your mind.

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あなたの人生を変える一冊 (One Book That Will Change Your Life)

  • 93 1
    Yifan Liu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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