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Some of my favourite books!
- **The Three-Body Problem & The Dark Forest by Cixin Liu. These novels explore humanity’s first encounters with alien intelligence, revealing the depths of strategic, evolutionary, and philosophical conflict. They present contemplation of cosmic civilization and have led me rethinking humanity’s place in a vast, and often hostile, cosmic arena.
- Eat That Frog by Brian Tracy. This book is a cry against procrastination. It urges you to tackle your most daunting tasks first. It argues that by confronting our “frogs” early, we cut through overwhelm and unlock productivity that compounds over time, which I absolutely agree with. It felt like reading a manual on time management that invited me to transform small daily victories into a pathway for lasting achievement.
- A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara. This one has taught me a lot! It explores the burden and beauty of trauma, urging us to find meaning in scars and to appreciate the delicate strength of our inner lives. It’s a reflection on how even the most broken spirits can echo with profound grace and empathy.
- Superintelligence by Nick Bostrom. How can we effectively encode our complex, multifaceted human values into AI systems so they truly understand and serve our subtle well-being instead of just following literal instructions? How do we ensure that an AI, tasked with goals like “make humans happy” or “solve hard problems,” doesn’t inadvertently cause harm by misinterpreting these directives?
- Cosmos **by Carl Sagan. This is Sagan’s love letter to curiosity and a guide to finding awe in the ordinary. We are a way for the cosmos to know itself. The universe is bigger than our worries. Be curious.
- Ikigai. The intersection of what we love, what we’re good at, what the world needs, and what we can be paid for forms the bedrock of a fulfilling life. This book is a reminder to pursue that elusive “reason for being” that makes every day rich with meaning.
- Cosmic Queries by Neil deGrasse Tyson. It isn’t about the answers we have but about the questions we’ve posed - questions we don’t even know are right or valid. It’s about how we investigate and why these investigations matter for our understanding of reality and our place within it.