HACKER Q&A
📣 optbuild

What is the most mind expanding book(s) you have read till date?


The book(s) may be related to your profession or not at all. The thing that matters is that it caused a paradigm shift in your mental model of the world or a topic or whatever?

Mine was Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs or SICP.


  👤 fm2606 Accepted Answer ✓
_What Should I Do With My Life_ by Po Bronson

There are a lot of stories of people who hate their jobs and make a switch.

One was a lawyer who became a truck driver. A doctor who became a programmer (iirc ... I do remember she was in tears because she didn't want to disappoint their family not sure if she wanted to be a programmer or not).

This book gave me the courage to leave engineering field and become a firefighter paramedic. 1st best career decision I made at the time


👤 mrmincent
Probably reading GEB and The Illuminatus! trilogy at the same time, switching from one to the other when my brain couldn’t handle any more of what I was currently reading.

Something about the combo helped me disconnect from the religion I had been raised in, and helped me see that there are many ways to view the world and life.


👤 i_dont_know_
"The Dawn of Everything" by the Davids, Graeber and Wengrow.

It's a little dense and a bit meandering at times, but the core idea behind it: we have a strong bias in believing that civilization comes in stages. We believe we go 'hunter/gatherer/primitive' -> agriculture -> 'real' civilization. Basically, this is totally false.

Not only is it totally false, but one of the reasons we might have this bias is because, while the native Americans were being eradicated, Western thinkers and theologians had to justify why Western civilization was 'better', despite native Americans basically giving Westerners the seeds for individual liberties and social blueprints for the Western Enlightenment...

It really uprooted my deepest beliefs about human history, civilization, and (most importantly for me) what I believe "the future" should look like. Mind-expanding for sure.


👤 imakwana
1975 ACM Turing Award Lecture on "Computer Science as an empirical inquiry: Symbols and Search" by Herbert Simon & Alan Newell (inventors of list processing).

https://amturing.acm.org/award_winners/simon_1031467.cfm

Herbert Simon later went on to win the Nobel Prize in Economics for his contributions on "Bounded Rationality" in decision making.

https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/economic-sciences/1978/sim...


👤 frontman1988
Ashtavakra Gita(Ancient hindu philosophy poem) : It really opened a new dimension of thinking for me. It's main message of identifying yourself as the witness consciousness is quite trippy and the sanskrit used is quite powerful. It plays around with the concepts of soul , karma and concept of non-duality in quite radical ways. I found it quite an empowering way of going about life, one can only imagine how it must have felt for the original author/s who discovered it as an "insight" on the reality of life. Such people nowadays would be called delusional though.

👤 p0d
The Bible. I was just sitting reading the book of Revelation considering how many movies lift images directly from this book of the Bible. Then I read from Proverbs that charm is deceptive and beauty fades away. I regularly need reminded not to assign more value to good lookers. This being ironic, as I am no David Hasselhoff. The Bible has been shifting my paradigm for 30 of 50 years.

👤 kazinator
Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid

BTW, there is another music-related "EGB" that Hoffy missed!

The keys G, B and Eb (separated from each other by a major third) used in John Coltrane's "Giant Steps". Major-third-spaced tonality changes, particularly masked by ii-V-I cadences, became known as Coltrane Changes.


👤 themodelplumber
Probably _The Mind Map Book_ by Tony Buzan.

This was a long time ago, but the book was beautiful right off the shelf and it made so much immediate, intuitive sense. It also came at just the right time in my life when I needed to focus on broad outlays of information, but didn't yet realize it, or how to do it.

Later on I developed my own method but I still go back and browse the book from time to time. A few years after my first reading, I used mind mapping to help me with a very stressful job and was able to get weeks ahead of my work there, using the extra time to learn about interesting new tech.

But beyond the principles/methods themselves, the book opened my mind to the idea that one could find ways to work with additional inspiration and productivity in the ideas & concepts space, which I built on as a foundation later as a professional trainer and coach.

The author's lecturing presence and style was also pretty unique. He was a broad thinker by nature, and was able to impart the beauty of such as quite uniquely different from the deeper sort of thinking.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QEokHNWf-Qg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Buzan

Interesting post idea, thanks.


👤 dopidopHN
The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood.

a book by science history writer James Gleick. The guy who wrote « chaos ».

It’s not about « computer », but rather the inevitable march toward our now ( with computers )

Each chapter break down a particular advance, or area of science that was changed by information theory ( before information theory was a thing )

Some titbits :

until the telegraph, the second faster way to carry meaning was putting a bunch of guys on horses.

The fastest was using drums over a river. — Talking about telegraph, the French had something innovative going on just a few years before it’s invention. Based on tower relay and a elaborate flag code.


👤 hypertele-Xii
My own diary.

It's like debugging a server log of your mind.

Note that I quickly deviated from any expected norms of "dear diary, today _____ happened and it made me feel ______", and instead simply decided to write, whatever cames to my mind, every day, no matter how nonsensical. Most of it is pointless and cringe, but there's some brilliant opinions, descriptions of values, and even poetry in there.

A diary is, after all, literally an expansion of your mind into the physical realm.


👤 stirfish
The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson [1]

A Life's Work by Rachel Cusk [2]

The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin [3]

We Real Cool by bell hooks [4]

[1] >The moment of queer pride is a refusal to be shamed by witnessing the other as being ashamed of you.

[2] >Birth is not merely that which divides women from men: it also divides women from themselves, so that a woman's understanding of what it is to exist is profoundly changed. Another person has existed in her, and after their birth the live within the jurisdiction of her consciousness. When she is with them she is not herself; when she is without them she is not herself; and so it is as difficult to leave your children as it is to stay with them. To discover this is to feel that your life has become irretrievably mired in conflict, or caught in some mythic snare in which you will perpetually, vainly struggle.

[3] >The terrible thing, old buddy, is that you must accept them. And I mean that very seriously. You must accept them and accept them with love. For these innocent people have no other hope. They are, in effect, still trapped in a history which they do not understand; and until they understand it, they cannot be released from it. They have had to believe for many years, and for innumerable reasons, that black men are inferior to white men. Many of them, indeed, know better, but, as you will discover, people find it very difficult to act on what they know.

[4] >Showing aggression is the simplest way to assert patriarchal manhood. Men of all classes know this. As a consequence, all men living in a culture of violence must demonstrate at some point in their lives that they are capable of being violent.


👤 Fynis96
The Law of One, a set of channeled transcripts by an entity named Ra (in congruency to the sun god Ra of Egyptian times) proclaiming to be three levels of densities, or major evolutions, ahead of our own as humans.

Great read whether it sticks around as a belief for you or not, akin to any other religious text in my opinion.

Can be read for free at lawofone.info

Definitely read the intro before jumping into the meat of it for the great context provided by the L/L Research team for what comes after.


👤 galfarragem
“The Beginning of Infinity” from David Deutsche.

Even if you are a die-hard pessimist it will open some cracks and plant seeds on your mind. Disguised as a physics book - not an easy read - this is a treaty on optimism.


👤 ankaAr
Around the World in Eighty Days, from Jules Verne. I read that when i was a child and blowed my mind with glimpses from other countries, other cultures and the joy of reading.

I think that after that book i had the question: how 100 years ago he was able to write about those places?. Then i never stopped to read. After that i started to develop the addiction i have about knowledge.

EDIT: oh, and the final plot twist.., was amazing.


👤 markus_zhang
The soul of the new machine. Prompted me to complete the hardware part of nand2tetris and now looking for something between it and rigid textbooks such as Computer Architecture.

👤 nathanaldensr
The Blessing of Humility by Jerry Bridges.

I've been a very prideful person nearly my entire life. This book really opened my eyes and also led me to Christian faith. I highly recommend it, even to children like my older son that also struggle with humility.

Also, of course, I'd recommend reading the New Testament, as it is the source for much of the material in Humility.


👤 zetalyrae
The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson.

The Requiem for Homo Sapiens tetralogy by David Zindell.


👤 ineedausername
Collected Works of C.G. Jung, Volume 09 Part 2 Aion_ Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self

I should mention that for many, his late work is completely insane, and he has indeed suffered psychosis at his latest years.

I should also mention, anecdotally speaking, you can experience dissociation and suffer peculiar dreams just by reading through this.


👤 rektide
1000 Years of Non-linear History by Miguel De Landa was a read from a long long time ago that was a good materialistic philosphy read, that helped me see & feel the world as morpholically advancing. It gave me a sense of what shifts & changes are, how they occur, and gave a narrative for many of the changes that reshaped humanity across the last 1000 years. Used a neat lense of geomorphology that was entertaining.

Non-zero: the Logic of Human Destiny was anothrr very good materialistic philosophy read for my impressionable young mind. Talking about human cooperation & emergence of civil order. Not nearly as in depth but I think of it as also quite related to the History of Everything, mentioned in other comments here.


👤 Eddy_Viscosity2
The Undercover Economist: Exposing Why the Rich are Rich, the Poor are Poor--and Why You Can Never Buy a Decent Used Car!

by Tim Harford

This book very much changed my understanding of home international finance worked and why.


👤 makeworld
The one that comes closest for me is Blindsight by Peter Watts.

👤 sp332
Permutation City by Greg Egan. I actually didn't like the story that much, but the book is just dense with ideas that I keep thinking about years later.

👤 grafelic
"The Illuminatus! Triology" by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson.

👤 tmpburning
1984... but it is just curious to see how much further we have gotten.

👤 DrStartup
Shantaram Power of Now Go Giver Art of Profitability Challenger Sale Sapiens Player of Games Rogue Warrior

👤 mharig
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy, by Douglas Adams

All you need to know about the universe. And mankind.


👤 ldbooth
The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins

👤 stevenhuang
Leslie Kean's UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Officials Go on the Record.

Reading this started my deep dive into the rabbit hole of high strangeness phenomena.

Can't say one way or another if it's all just bunk or not, but at least it's entertaining.


👤 sambapa
Does body expanding also count if you are a philosophical monist? ;) Overcoming Gravity 2 - buy this book and a pair of gymnastic rings and you are set for life in terms of fitness (...ok, you should also do squats and deadlifts with weights)

👤 sidkhanooja
For this year, mine was Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman.

TL;DR - the book explains how humans are predictably irrational and how seeming cognitive ease in decisioning is simply laziness in action since the brain will substitute a tough decision for a similar but easy one! It has made me reflect upon why I think the way I do, helped me to remove most bias from my actions, and also has a great suggestion that you should ask others to check you if you sound stupid, which is not great for your ego but is necessary nonetheless.


👤 scottfweintraub
The Phantom Tollbooth. Hands down. Yes, it helps if you read it before you are 10, affecting dramatically more of your life than anything read as an adult.

👤 electroagenda
In terms of knowledge: "A brief history of nearly everithing"

In terms of soft skills: "Outliers"


👤 ksaj
Metamagical Themas from Douglas R. Hofstadter. I even have both a soft and a hard cover copy on my shelf. This book opened my mind on a lot of subjects big time.

👤 r053bud
“The Mind Illuminated” by Culadasa (John Yates). Completely changed my life.

👤 lcall
The Book of Mormon (with the Bible). After decades of reading it repeatedly, it does not run out of ways to comfort, strengthen, give direction & confidence & pea ce, and help me want to be a better person. Cover to cover, amazing to me.

Also Stephen Covey's 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Be proactive; Begin with the end in mind; Put first things first; Think win–win; Seek first to understand, then to be understood; Synergize; Sharpen the Saw (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_7_Habits_of_Highly_Effecti...).


👤 HellDunkel
1. Felix Denk - Der Klang der Familie: Berlin, Techno and the Fall of the Wall 2. Brian Greene - The Fabric of the Cosmos 3. Jürgen Teipel - Waste your Youth

👤 febed
For me it was „the mystique of enlightenment“ by UG Krishnamurthi. It helped me let go of my craving for the idea of enlightenment.

👤 preordained
The Disappearance of the Universe, by Gary Renard.

👤 w0de0
Crime and Punishment

Leaves of Grass

Persuasion

Foundation

The Diary of Lady Murasaki

The Remains of the Day

Travels in Siberia

Anabasis

A Brief History of Time

The Rebel


👤 uaas
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace.

👤 ismaildonmez
“The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion” by Jonathan Haidt.

👤 no1groyp
Awareness by Anthony de Mello

👤 dbs
Demon haunted world by Carl Sagan

Why: skeptical/scientific thinking


👤 beyond_based
This Time The World, by GLR.