As I try to ramp up my reading I'm converting my GoodReads habit to BookWyrm on the Fediverse. See my main Fediverse profile on Friendica at: friendica.myportal.social/profile/hankg
A young English gentleman of means, Aubrey is immediately intrigued by Lord Ruthven, the mysterious …
The Vampyre, an early-1800s vampire novella
3 stars
Because it was written over 200 years ago it definitely has some interesting stylistic choices that make it hard to get through. It is interesting seeing which parts of the vampire mythology existed in the early 1800s in Britain, when/where it was written. It is a novella so a short read. I didn't fall in love with it though.
A millennium into the future two advancements have altered the course of human history: the …
This was much better than the short story vignettes of I Robot series. You can see where some of the world building components of those short stories made it to this book. Although some of the characters act in unnatural feeling ways to scenarios I still very much enjoyed the story over all and felt engaged by it. The anachronisms provide an interesting snapshot of what mid-20th century views of super far future stuff would be like or the problems we face. The biggest anachronism being that the entire population of Earth or 8 billion could only be supported by using giant factory food production units making yeast based synthetic foods not growing it. There was even a quip about billions starving if they went back to growing food. Meanwhile earth passed that population point a couple years ago.
ROBOPSYCHOLOGIST
Dr. Susan Calvin had seen it all when it came to robots. As a …
Dry but solid exploration of of "the three laws" and its ramifications
4 stars
Isaac Asimov: I, Robot (Paperback, 1984, Del Rey)
4 stars
I read it in dribs and drabs over the past few months. Although obviously anachronistic about robotic hardware, computer technology, and gender relations since it was written so long ago it was still a great exploration of how "the three laws" of robotics plays out in life scenarios. I loved the vignette style format and its attempt to deep dive into the technical problems being explored. I can see why all that is way too dry for others though.
ROBOPSYCHOLOGIST
Dr. Susan Calvin had seen it all when it came to robots. As a …
I read it in dribs and drabs over the past few months. Although obviously anachronistic about robotic hardware, computer technology, and gender relations since it was written so long ago it was still a great exploration of how "the three laws" of robotics plays out in life scenarios. I loved the vignette style format and its attempt to deep dive into the technical problems being explored. I can see why all that is way too dry for others though.
ROBOPSYCHOLOGIST
Dr. Susan Calvin had seen it all when it came to robots. As a …
This sort of series of short stories method of exploring a world/world building is something I thought of doing to flesh things out in my own fiction writing.
I read this nearly 20 year old book after Peter Attia's recent longevity book as comparison. The premise is that using all of the latest knowledge on how to live healthily longer and the ever increasing life expectancy every year we could eventually live forever. Literally. Kerzweil had fantastical (pun intended) projections for when technologies would be here for life extension. He projected that by the 2020s (today) we were expected to have nanobots replacing blood cells and other bodily functions, a whole parallel bionic digestive system so we could eat whatever we wanted while the nanobots would be building out our real nutrition. Their precursors were going to be drugs that achieve comparably fantastical things a decade or two before.
Beyond their fantastical technology projections they bought into a lot of the craze that still dominates alt-health world with radical exaggerations of the negative effects of artificial sweeteners, coffee, …
I read this nearly 20 year old book after Peter Attia's recent longevity book as comparison. The premise is that using all of the latest knowledge on how to live healthily longer and the ever increasing life expectancy every year we could eventually live forever. Literally. Kerzweil had fantastical (pun intended) projections for when technologies would be here for life extension. He projected that by the 2020s (today) we were expected to have nanobots replacing blood cells and other bodily functions, a whole parallel bionic digestive system so we could eat whatever we wanted while the nanobots would be building out our real nutrition. Their precursors were going to be drugs that achieve comparably fantastical things a decade or two before.
Beyond their fantastical technology projections they bought into a lot of the craze that still dominates alt-health world with radical exaggerations of the negative effects of artificial sweeteners, coffee, EM radiation. While simultaneously they were really big on the exaggerated health claims of alkaline water and radical over-supplementation. The latter leads to suggested regiments that they follow of taking literally 90-250 pills a day. No thank you.
The core that is good is their diet, physical exercise, stress management, sleep, and cognitive exercises. It was pretty run of the mill advice you would get from any major mainstream place. That doesn't sell though hence all of the above stuff which is at best unnecessary to at worst ludicrous or maybe even dangerous if done impromperly.
It was an interesting snapshot in time but the juice really isn't worth the squeeze. You can find the real actionable information anywhere.
After reading Peter Attia's longevity book I figured I'd dust off some longevity books I received as presents almost 20 years ago to see how their information has aged (pun very much intended). First up is Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever by Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman...
A groundbreaking manifesto on living better and longer that challenges the conventional medical thinking on …
Good bones but some issues
3 stars
Overall the book presents broad stroke information on longevity that looks at the usual areas: exercise, diet, sleep, and how to be proactive with health. He contrasts this "Medicine 3.0" approach with the existing "Medicine 2.0" approach. Overall the suggestions are solid and mostly align with standard medical advice. His exercise level suggestions are far more than what is usually recommended or shown to be effective in studies but he has rationale for it which makes sense and may pan out over the long term but there is no study data to confirm it. Nothing he suggests is outside the realm of safety.
The food discussion is a bit more problematic. Again the core is good bones however I think prior his Paleo/Keto bent shows here. He looks at it mostly through the carb/fat/protein macros lense. The way he presents it you would not be wrong to conclude that you …
Overall the book presents broad stroke information on longevity that looks at the usual areas: exercise, diet, sleep, and how to be proactive with health. He contrasts this "Medicine 3.0" approach with the existing "Medicine 2.0" approach. Overall the suggestions are solid and mostly align with standard medical advice. His exercise level suggestions are far more than what is usually recommended or shown to be effective in studies but he has rationale for it which makes sense and may pan out over the long term but there is no study data to confirm it. Nothing he suggests is outside the realm of safety.
The food discussion is a bit more problematic. Again the core is good bones however I think prior his Paleo/Keto bent shows here. He looks at it mostly through the carb/fat/protein macros lense. The way he presents it you would not be wrong to conclude that you pretty much must eat a lot of animal protein to stay healthy and the plant side of the equation is kind of moot. No epidimiological data holds this up. All of it shows that a plant dominant diet is a key part of long term health and longevity. Even the handful of studies that show that people who ate meat had better outcomes than vegetarians and vegans, the meat level consumed is way less than one serving a day (usually in the 2-3 ounces/60-90 grams level). While he has no problem telling people to just suck it up on exercise and sleep fronts on this front he minimizes this by essentially saying "eat a lot of meat three times a day" follow up with minimizing negative longevity effects of that advice with "just take a statin" and "not everyone's lipid profile is adversely affected by eating a lot of saturated fat". This is probably the weakest part of the book.
I was expecting more actionable information as well. This is more like a primer with a pitch for "Medicine 3.0" which is going to specialists for all these special tests, interactions, etc. I personally do do all those things but I have to pay a lot out of pocket for that. Would it be great if all of this was covered by standard medical insurance? Absolutely. It isn't. There are plenty of things that those that can't afford that sort of treatment could be doing, and most of it is following standard guidelines put out by government health organizations. Laying that out could have been helpful to readers who can't spend thousands of dollars a year out of pocket on these things.
Overall I learned almost nothing new in this book because I follow these topics intensely already. For someone who has never heard of these things it could be a helpful primer but I have concerns about people coming away with misimpressions on the diet side of things and perhaps even fatalism about the approachability of these things if "Medicine 3.0" is out of financial range for them.
A groundbreaking manifesto on living better and longer that challenges the conventional medical thinking on …
In my #health and #fitness posts earlier this week Peter Attia's came up a couple of times. This book has been making the circuit and I've been thinking about picking it up. Well, a spontaneous trip to the bookstore after lunch and I figured "WTH, let's give it a spin." #PeterAttia#longevity