My Reading Journey Backwards and Forwards

Tag: Non-fiction

Da Vinci and the 40 Answers

By Mark L Fox – A Book About Creative Problem Solving

Housekeeping

I bought this book back in 2008. I assume it was either shortly before or after I attended a seminar at the Wizard Academy. I have highlights from 2009, 2014, 2020, and 2023 that I’ve found so far – but I feel like I never finished reading it??

Reflections and Random Thoughts

Grammarly is sooo annoying.

Insights

Key Take-Aways

Something Actionable

My rating

What Everyone Else Thinks

Post Progress

7%

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BooksNon-fiction

Start Less Finish More

“In truth, learning is the only sustainable source of competitive advantage in a world of disruption and complexity.” (Dan Montgomery, Start Less, Finish More)

A book about Agile Project Management by Dan Montgomery

Reflections

The title is almost enough.

Insights

Key Take-Aways

Something Actionable

Review Title

What Everyone Else Thinks

The War of Art – Steven Pressfield

If, after reading this book, you do not feel compelled to begin whatever it is you are avoiding beginning – READ IT AGAIN.

Then read The Practice by Seth Godin.

From my Zettlekasten

“The paradox seems to be, as Socrates demonstrated long ago, that the truly free individual is free only to the extent of his own self-mastery. While those who will not govern themselves are condemned to find masters to govern over them.” (Steven Pressfield, The War of Art)

You can read the reviews here. You can buy it at the top of the same page.

Digital Zettlekasten

author David Kadavy

March 28, 2023

Now this book, I love. It clearly explains some basic concepts about Zettlekasten that I’ve had trouble with. Like the definitions of fleeting notes relative to literature notes relative to permanent notes. I’ve been trying to understand this for two years!

Thinking Fast and Slow – Daniel Kahneman

Reflections and Random Thoughts

Jan 18, 2025


Continuing my read of Thinking, Fast and Slow via the Shortform summary, I came across a discussion that essentially debunks the concept of priming. The summary notes that even the author, Daniel Kahneman, admitted to having relied too heavily on results from experiments that lacked sufficient rigor—yet he remains a believer in the concept. I wouldn’t have known this without reading the summary, though I imagine there’s plenty written about it elsewhere. And, I wouldn’t have realized that I had completely bought into the theory of priming myself—not sure if I was introduced to it in this book or at some earlier time.


Insights

Key Take-Aways

System 1 automatically generates suggestions, feelings, and intuitions for System 2. If endorsed by System 2, intuitions turn into beliefs, and impulses turn into voluntary actions.

This summary was provided ShortForm

Something Actionable

My rating of this book is not based on the quality of its writing or content but rather on how practical and valuable it has been in my life.

Review Title

What Everyone Else Thinks

I started reading Thinking Fast and Slow in Dec of 2022 – it was recommended by Chip & Dan Heath in their book Decisive – in fact, they called it essential reading.

“… our recommended decision books, but to understand the problems we face in making decisions, essential reading would include Daniel Kahneman’s book, Thinking, Fast and Slow, mentioned above, and Dan Ariely’s Predictably Irrational. One of the handful of books that provides advice on making decisions better is Nudge by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein, which was written for “choice architects” in business and government who construct decision systems such as retirement plans or organ-donation policies. It has been used to improve government policies in the United States, Great Britain, and other countries.” (Chip Heath, Dan Heath, Decisive)

It’s also on Nassim Taleb’s list of 25 Best Non-Fiction books of all time – which you can find on Medium here.

While I’ve gotten some value from this book I’m not enjoying the read.

March 26, 2023

So, I dislike reading this book enough that I’ve committed myself to reading it daily for 10 minutes until I’ve finished it. The gist of the five pages I read seems to be that 1. Preference for the status quo is a consequence of loss aversion, and loss aversion is built into the “automatic evaluations” of what he calls system 1, which I believe (I still get confused on this point) is our subconscious thought process.

This is one of the reasons I dislike this book. System 1 and System 2 – why make up new terms for commonly understood terms? System 1 is for the subconscious, and system 2 is for the conscious; what’s the point? It just makes the book hard to understand. I have to keep thinking about what the terms mean rather than what he is trying to say. Very annoying.

March 28, 2023

As usual, I barely understand what I’m reading. This 10 or maybe 15 minutes was a discussion about the perception of fairness and reference points in economics. And a brief discussion of “altruistic punishment.” The tendency of one stranger to punish another for what they perceive to be unfair behavior. i.e., refusing to purchase from a store perceived to be “gouging.”

Seriously hate this book.

April 2, 2023

I’ve started counting the number of times this author tells the reader what they are thinking – seriously can’t get thru a 10 minute reading without another instance of him saying “you just thought…” – this is one of the most unreadable popular books I’ve ever tried to get through.

I leave room for the possibility that I will feel differently about it with a second read, but I doubt I can get through a second read. I downloaded a summary from Ninja Reads – perhaps that will help.

July 1, 2024

This book is referenced in so many of the books I’ve read since – I’m going to make a list of them here.

  • Decisive
  • Wait – Frank Partnoy

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