User Profile

Tania

Tania@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 6 months ago

data science researcher, ex software deveveloper, pole dancer, bibliophile, interested in machine learning, comp neuroscience, sociology. I read a bit of (almost) everything. 🇸🇬🇦🇺🇩🇪

This link opens in a pop-up window

2025 Reading Goal

66% complete! Tania has read 8 of 12 books.

reviewed Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami

Haruki Murakami: Norwegian Wood (2000, Vintage)

A hauntingly beautiful masterpiece

I love Murakami's writing style - his descriptions, symbolism, the philosophical dialogs, the way he handles serious themes (existence, innocence, love, death) and his jazz and literary references. There was only one character in the book that annoyed me somewhat. I want to blame it on Murakami's lack of first-hand experience with the sort of problems the character had, but maybe its my own. All his other characters were perfect in their imperfections and totally relatable. The story itself was hauntingly beautiful.

David McRaney: How Minds Change (Hardcover, 2022, Portfolio)

In this lively journey through human psychology, bestselling author and creator of the You Are …

Enjoyable and insightful

I didn't start with high expectations for this book but was pleasantly surprised. It was very insightful and clearly written - a mix of interesting conversations, humane stories and individual journeys, as well as some social science, psychology and neuroscience theory and research. I really enjoyed reading it. Now I need to give McRaney's podcast a second chance.

David McRaney: How Minds Change (Hardcover, 2022, Portfolio)

In this lively journey through human psychology, bestselling author and creator of the You Are …

Mercier and Sperber are adamant that our reasoning isn’t flawed or irrational, just biased and lazy, which is both adaptive and rational in the context in which it evolved, a language-based information ecosystem where the selective pressures favored the production of justifications for individual perspectives during group deliberation to reach consensus on inferences and shared goals. “In other words,” as Stafford explains, “Their big idea, briefly, is that human reason evolved to convince others (and be skeptical of other’s attempts to convince you).”

How Minds Change by 

David McRaney: How Minds Change (Hardcover, 2022, Portfolio)

In this lively journey through human psychology, bestselling author and creator of the You Are …

If a promising change to belief, behavior, or attitude was too much of an outlier, epistemic vigilance might incorrectly tag it as suspicious. Should too many people tag it that way, good information that could benefit the group would fail to spread.

How Minds Change by 

David McRaney: How Minds Change (Hardcover, 2022, Portfolio)

In this lively journey through human psychology, bestselling author and creator of the You Are …

all knowledge, “no matter how novel, is never at first, totally independent of previous knowledge. It is only a reorganization, adjustment, correction, or addition with respect to existing knowledge. Even experimental data unknown up to a certain time must be integrated with existing knowledge. But this does not happen by itself; it takes an effort of assimilation and accommodation.”

How Minds Change by 

David McRaney: How Minds Change (Hardcover, 2022, Portfolio)

In this lively journey through human psychology, bestselling author and creator of the You Are …

Since the brain doesn’t know what it doesn’t know, when it constructs causal narratives it fills holes in reality with provisional explanations. The problem is that when a group of brains all uses the same placeholder, good-enough-for-now construal to plug such a hole, over time that shared provisional explanation can turn into consensus—a common sense of what is and is not true. This tendency has led to a lot of strange shared beliefs over the centuries, consensus realities that today seem preposterous.

How Minds Change by 

Tim Marshall: Prisoners of geography (2015)

All leaders are constrained by geography. Their choices are limited by mountains, rivers, seas and …

Engaging and concise

Overall an easy and worthwhile read - concisely writtenand engaging. My only criticism would be that the explanations of international politics may be sometimes overly simplistic due to the focus on geography.

avatar for Tania Tania boosted
Kim Stanley Robinson: Complete Mars Trilogy (2015, HarperCollins Publishers)

All three volumes of the worldwide bestselling Mars trilogy.

Mars – the barren, forbidding planet …

"If democracy and self-rule are the fundamentals, then why should people give up these rights when they enter their work place? In politics we fight like tigers for freedom, for the right to elect our leaders, for freedom of movement, choice of residence, choice of what work to pursue – control of our lives, in short. And then we wake up in the morning and go to work, and all those rights disappear. We no longer insist on them. And so for most of the day we return to feudalism. That is what capitalism is – a version of feudalism in which capital replaces land, and business leaders replace kings. But the hierarchy remains. And so we still hand over our lives’ labour, under duress, to feed rulers who do no real work.’"

Complete Mars Trilogy by 

Percival Everett: Dr. No (2022, Graywolf Press)

The protagonist of Percival Everett’s puckish new novel is a brilliant professor of mathematics who …

Too absurd

Nice premise and reasonably entertaining at the start. Clever word play throughout but generally a little too absurd and lacking a proper plot. I got bored somewhere in the middle - not really my cup of tea.

Percival Everett: Dr. No (2022, Graywolf Press)

The protagonist of Percival Everett’s puckish new novel is a brilliant professor of mathematics who …

To designate feelings, to verbalize them, was to, necessarily, alter them, with no particular direction or mission. When I was very young, I didn’t trust speech, believing that other, nonword languages would intrude, complicate, or obstruct meaning, body language, facial expressions, timing, inflection, and so I wrote notes, letters. Now I knew that any movement from initial, pure thought was a movement away from precise meaning or representation.

Dr. No by  (Page 63)