Books that help you understand the world a bit better
Books that help you understand the world a bit better
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g3org3y

Original Poster:

21,822 posts

209 months

Friday 8th October 2021
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Which books would you recommend that have given you a better understanding of the world, people, politics, laws etc?


Found this really interesting, knocked a lot of my pre-existing beliefs on the head.


A great rundown discussing misinformation, disinformation, bias, causality, big data, susceptibility of science etc.


Much better understanding of the law and allowed me to look past the media outrage headlines and political rhetoric.


Much better understanding of Al Qaeda, jihad and the 'War on Terror'.

Edited by g3org3y on Friday 8th October 19:19

jp1982

300 posts

217 months

Saturday 9th October 2021
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'and then all hell broke loose' Richard Engel.

I found this an excellent read if you wish to understand about the current situation in the Middle East, rise of ISIS etc

Taita

7,861 posts

221 months

Saturday 9th October 2021
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Enlightenment Now by Pinker is excellent. Tough to get through first chapter but then great.

jreiche

2 posts

80 months

Tuesday 12th October 2021
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Debt: The first 5000 years by David Graeber. The most interesting and enlightening book I have ever read about money. Deals with some of the "folklore" about how money came to be.

The Origins of Political Order and the sequel Political Order and Political Decay - both by Francis Fukuyama. An absolutely immense work on how the World came to be as it is today.

CallThatMusic

2,856 posts

106 months

Tuesday 12th October 2021
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A Brief History Of The Future - Jacques Attali

TwigtheWonderkid

47,038 posts

168 months

Wednesday 13th October 2021
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Guns, Germs and Steel: A short history of everybody for the last 13,000 years - Jared Diamond

Why are primitive tribes in the Amazon basin and Papua New Guinea still hunting animals with blow darts whilst we have nuclear weapons and automatic machine guns. Are we just cleverer than them?
Why did European nations colonise Africa, Asia and South America, and not the other way around?

The answers might not be what you expect. Fascinating stuff.

g3org3y

Original Poster:

21,822 posts

209 months

Saturday 30th October 2021
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A very clear understanding of complex geopolitical situations.

Johnnytheboy

24,499 posts

204 months

Saturday 30th October 2021
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On a similar note, this book joined an awful lot of geopolitical dots for me, can't recommend it highly enough.