Tyler Cowen on Reading 4/18/22

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 14

  • @EricJacobusOfficial
    @EricJacobusOfficial 2 года назад +2

    Enjoyed this conversation. My currents:
    1. Totemism & Exogamy III by JG Frazer
    2. Japan: A Cultural History by Sansom
    3. On Revolution by Hannah Arendt
    4. Blood Taking and Oath Making
    5. The Duel and the Oath by H C Lea
    Looking forward to Cowen's new book and Russ's too.

  • @kennethbashford7520
    @kennethbashford7520 2 года назад +2

    Always nice to find someone else who has ‘A Soldier of the Great War’ in his Top 5. A real thrill when it’s Russ Roberts.

    • @kreek22
      @kreek22 8 месяцев назад

      Helprin I liked at first, but as I read on I developed the sense that he had a fundamentally anti-literary mind, a reductionist mind that he had set, by muscular effort, to make literary. But, that is his best book. The one following it, Memoir from Antproof Case, showcases his weaknesses more clearly.

  • @eniac78
    @eniac78 2 года назад +3

    That's interesting about remembering information in the context of where it appears on the page. This is definitely how I used to recall information I read for exams.

    • @kreek22
      @kreek22 8 месяцев назад +1

      This is common. It's related to why the ancients used the mnemonic technique of memory palaces: the human memory evolved to have a strong spatial orientation. We were hunters and gatherers for hundreds of thousands of years. We've been readers for a few thousand years at most.

  • @evfast
    @evfast 2 года назад +2

    I read Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (R. Pirsig) around the age of 16. Definitely my first piece of serious philosophical fiction and was the most complex book I had attempted up to that point.
    Russ mentioning it created a moment of connection during this podcast, and brought the story flooding back to me.

  • @DanHowardMtl
    @DanHowardMtl 2 года назад +1

    Great resource for finding new books to read! Thanks!

  • @foeppel
    @foeppel 2 года назад +3

    Love this conversation! I wonder how does one arrive at their idiosyncratic methods for getting the most out of their reading? Russ and Tyler’s methods differed in important ways at times.

  • @bennguyen1313
    @bennguyen1313 2 года назад

    I've heard it said (Maria Popova, Patrick Collison?) that John Crowley's "Little, Big. Little, Big book", takes a while to warm-up to , but that it's worth it.
    I recommend Sadhguru's Death book.

  • @lloydritchey
    @lloydritchey 2 года назад

    It was a literary crime that Mark Twain, Will Durant, & Robert Heinlein were never mentioned. I'm going to take Tyler's tip on clustering & put it to practice.

  • @GordonAitchJay
    @GordonAitchJay 2 года назад

    5:11 Russ: I used to have a lot of trouble writing in books. The whole idea of highlighting was so horrifying to me. It was sacrilegious-
    Tyler: It's violence- It's violence against books, right?
    Russ: Yeah, it's horrible. I hated it.
    Tyler: Especially if it's yellow, that's the worst highlight colour.
    Russ: Awful, awful!

  • @noontimespender
    @noontimespender 2 года назад +1

    Dear RUclips comment section readers, Allow me to offer some free life advice, put some Morton Feldman on the hifi and read Samuel Beckett. How it is. Molloy. Malone Dies. The Unnameable. Watt. Enjoy.

  • @redman6790
    @redman6790 2 года назад

    @19:29