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brainworm

brainworm@books.theunseen.city

Joined 3 years, 6 months ago

Ahoy 👋 Only listing books I have actually read. My aims in using Bookwyrm are: 1. to enable asynchronous book clubs (i.e. swap read-lists, see if anything has already been read, discuss) and, 2. to prompt me to write reviews, to consolidate learning.

Ratings are for future me, not universal judgements 🕊️ Approximate meanings: * ★☆☆☆☆ Terrible. I regret taking the the time to read this. * ★★☆☆☆ Bad. Would rather have been meditating/running. * ★★⯪☆☆ Pass. Just worth reading, not more. * ★★★☆☆ Good. Worth reading, even if only once. Not much more to say. * ★★★⯪☆ Very good. Some notable form or content. Lasting impact, if small. * ★★★★☆ Excellent. Grateful that someone took the effort to write this, sad to think that certain other people might not read. * ★★★★⯪ Outstanding. Unlocked new perspectives on life, released new emotions, will re-read or reference in future. * ★★★★★ (Not giving this to anything because I'm a Bayesian.)

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brainworm's books

Currently Reading

Nick Srnicek, Alex Williams: Inventing the Future (Paperback, 2015, Verso Books)

A major new manifesto for a high-tech future free from work

Neo-liberalism isn’t working. …

The central ideological support for the work ethic is that remuneration be tied to suffering. ... Whether for a religious or secular goal, suffering is thought to constitute a necessary rite of passage. ... A life without suffering is seen as frivolous and meaningless. This position must be rejected as a holdover from a now-transcended stage of human history. The drive to make suffering meaningful may have had some functional logic in times when poverty, illness and starvation were necessary features of existence. But we should reject this logic today and recognise that we have moved beyond the need to ground meaning in suffering. Work, and the suffering that accompanies it, should not be glorified.

Inventing the Future by ,

Nick Srnicek, Alex Williams: Inventing the Future (Paperback, 2015, Verso Books)

A major new manifesto for a high-tech future free from work

Neo-liberalism isn’t working. …

Review of 'Inventing the Future', 2015

TL;DR: work is dying, and we should help hospice it. Automation is actually good, capitalism isn't, and we have to address both at once. The struggle for a better world must include strategies which are long-term and wide-scoped in addition to the more familiar spectacular events we associate with leftist action. Another world is coming, we can help shape which.

I read this book 10 years after it was published; the analysis, arguments and proposals presented in the book seem to have only matured with time.

The book incorporates a lot of Marx (analysis of capitalism) and Gramsci ((counter-)hegemony). Piketty, Žižek and Fisher are mentioned. The book still very much "belongs" to the authors. Although this is a book of politics, analysis and theory, yet goes surprisingly far into practice.

It begins with a critical analysis of the contemporary left, coining the term "folk-political" to describe a …

Toby Ord: The Precipice (Paperback, 2021, Hachette Books)

Long-termism for beginners

Seems to be 'the' long-termist book. Very, very utilitarian. Made me feel relatively safe about meteor strikes and volcanoes. Even made me feel a bit less worried about nuclear armageddon, which I previously thought would be a complete and total show-stopper. I feel he downplayed the badness of rapid biospheric destruction & atmospheric change.

The conclusion that AI threat outstrips all other existential risks is something I still can't get on board with. In any case, it seems enough EA people (the presumed target audience) agree and are on the case. That leaves the rest of us to battle the current and progressing crises :)

Definitely worth a read. The span and scope Ord addresses does invoke feelings of awe and compassion. 3 stars because it is politico-philosophical book, but reading it has lead to me changing very little.