Monday, November 27, 2023
A City on Mars by Kelly & Zach Weinersmith (2023)
This book is well-researched and comprehensive. My personal experience with International Law is that there basically are no rules. Nation State leaders do whatever they want. Therefore, I don't completely buy into the detailed analysis of the policies and laws of nation state actors in space. I do agree with the game theoretic analysis, including the "company towns" analogies. The data and tech are very interesting. And, of course, the snarky prose is wonderful. 4/5 Stars.
Labels:
popsci
Thursday, November 23, 2023
Saturday, November 18, 2023
Meditations by Marcus Aurelius (175 AD)
I enjoyed this collection of the Roman emperor's personal journal snippets. They are short, dense, and unambiguous. It's interesting how the fundamentals of Stoical Roman ethics of Aurelius' era have so much in common with other civilizations' ethics, e.g. Zoroastrianism's good deeds from good thought. Civic duty, and aligning our conscious decisions to the Logos (divine, cosmic consciousness) is also repeatedly and well-articulated with examples. I learned a lot in a short time. 4/5 Stars.
Labels:
philosophy
Sunday, November 12, 2023
Play Dead by Harlan Coben (1/1/2010)
Harlan Coben wrote this book when he was 19 and 20 years old, as an undergrad in college. The values, perspectives, hormones, and perspectives of a 20-year-old shine through the fantastic (though somewhat melodramatic) plotting and dialog. It's always great to catch up on the early works of a good writer.I really enjoyed this book, despite the terrible, cardboard 2-D characters. In particular, the end is well-crafted and well-edited. 5/5 Stars.
Labels:
thriller
Sunday, November 5, 2023
Thursday, November 2, 2023
Der Prozess von Franz Kafka (1925)
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Ich habe dieses Buch langsam gelesen, weil mir die Prosa und der Stil gefallen haben. Die bürgerlichen und sozialen Interaktionen sind schrecklich, frustrierend und erschreckend. Die Hauptfigur K hat gesunden Menschenverstand und stellt unschuldige, vernünftige Fragen. Der Dialog und die detaillierte Darstellung der Bewegungen, Ereignisse und Schauplätze sind fantastisch. Die Geschichte ist natürlich sehr deprimierend. 4/5 Sterne.
Labels:
genfiction
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