Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Baghdad's Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Rationale: I wasn't paying very close attention to Our Glorious Ally's Recent Imperial Adventures whilst it was happening. Partly this was because this sort of thing is difficult to piece together when you're reading it on a daily basis in the newspapers and partly because I was busy being a truculent teenager.
Anyway this seems to be the standard text on the subject and will hopefully give me a good grounding in What the Hell Happened.
The Trouble with Physics: The Rise of String Theory, the Fall of a Science and What Comes Next by Lee Smolin
Rationale: I enjoyed the discussion of theoretical physics in The Quark and the Jaguar by Murray Gell-Mann, which was published in the early nineties, and I also enjoyed The Sleepwalkers by Arthur Koestler. I really want to find out what's happened since, and what the current state of play is as regards Big Science.
This book was recommended to me by one of my physics teachers a few years ago, and at the time was being serialised in The Times. I skimmed through it a while back in a bookshop and was impressed by the tone and content.
Introduction to Materials Science for Engineers by James F. Shackelford
Rationale: this is one of the set textbooks for the course I am (if everything works out) starting in September (there will be a few of these to come).
Manufacturing Engineering and Technology by Serope Kalpakjian and Steven Schmid
Rationale: Again another set text. I want to have a vague familiarity with the course materials well before the course actually starts. The reason for this is that I learn best when presented with a fairly long runway. I also like the opportunity to become comfortable with a particular textbook layout before using it in earnest.
The End of Politics: New Labour and the Folly of Managerialism by Chris Dillow
Rationale: This book is much discussed by the likes of Alex Harrowell and Daniel Davis and Dillow's blog is quite superb. If his book is even half as interesting and engaging as his blog then this will be a worthwhile read.
The Hidden Family by Charles Stross
Rationale: I enjoyed the previous book in this series and since I finished it the sequence has been praised and commented on by Nobel economics laureate Paul Krugman. Definitely not one to miss out on.
Foundations of Engineering by Mark T. Holtzapple
Rationale: Another set text!
Mathematics for Engineers: A Modern Interactive Approach by Anthony Croft
Rationale: And again.
Management for Engineers, Scientists and Technologists by John V. Chelsom
Rationale: Same again - nothing to see here.
Traders, Guns and Money: Knowns and Unknowns in the Dazzling World of Derivatives by Satyajit Das
Rationale: I've read Nassim Nicholas Taleb's books,The Black Swan and Fooled by Randomness, and enjoyed them immensely. However I would like a more in-depth and technical look at all the derivatives, investments, quantitative finance, mortgage-backed securities and other paraphernalia of the ongoing economic troubles.
This book seems to get high reviews and from the brief excerpt on Amazon seem to capture this particular facet of the Zeitgeist rather well.
The Accidental Pornographer: A Story About Having a Go - And Succeeding... in Failing by Gavin Griffiths
Rationale: After reading Paul Carr's enjoyable account of trying and sort of not-quite failing,Bringing Nothing To The Party , I sought out similarly themed books. This looks to be one such in which the eponymous pornographer protagonist tries and fails.
And as an additional bonus he apparently meets none other than my favourite business antihero Felix Dennis!
Against a Dark Background by Iain M Banks
Rationale: Well, I'm reading this at the moment so I've rather jumped the gun as far as rationale goes. It is a spectacularly florid book with titanic set pieces and more Big Dumb Objects than you can shake a space elevator at. Truth be told it could easily gain from content-trimming if you prefer tighter reads, but I've always enjoyed Banks' Banksishness so it's all puppy for the fat as far as I'm concerned.
Showing posts with label lists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lists. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Wednesday, October 01, 2008
Penstroke and Complex
There are two kinds of problems in the world:
- Penstroke problems: problems caused by legislators or businesses that could be solved with effective legislation. Prohibition is one such problem.
- Complex problems: problems of huge scale and complexity, which require a great deal of effort, experimentation, thought, and consideration from many people to be solved. Global warming is an example.
Labels:
global warming,
lists,
problems,
prohibition
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Someone Within Earshot is Perpetrating Morris Dancing
And as such I am doing a roundup of definitions:
Culture: something invented by the Victorians to describe the things people did that weren't directly connected with business, science, sex, politics, or making things.
Culture is nowadays afforded too much respect and taken too seriously.
Politics: the name for the study and practice of groups of people make decisions. It has the potential to be an enlightening and enjoyable experience but is generally irritating, boring, and full of pointless meetings and unnecessary complaining.
Voters: the cause of most of the problems facing any democratic country.
Technology: a much-overused word that should be avoided, if at all possible, in any discussion involving practical problem-solving. It is a general term for a massive variety of things and should be treated as such.
Also it is not synonymous with "consumer electronics" - whatever the BBC and every other news outlet seems to think.
"Technology" is any tangible or material product of the human mind.
Economics: the study and practice of how scarce resources like time, energy, materials and work are distributed.
Money: an arbitrary unit that equates to a certain amount of a particular resource. Money is used to distribute resources.
Those Morris Dancers are still at it!
Culture: something invented by the Victorians to describe the things people did that weren't directly connected with business, science, sex, politics, or making things.
Culture is nowadays afforded too much respect and taken too seriously.
Politics: the name for the study and practice of groups of people make decisions. It has the potential to be an enlightening and enjoyable experience but is generally irritating, boring, and full of pointless meetings and unnecessary complaining.
Voters: the cause of most of the problems facing any democratic country.
Technology: a much-overused word that should be avoided, if at all possible, in any discussion involving practical problem-solving. It is a general term for a massive variety of things and should be treated as such.
Also it is not synonymous with "consumer electronics" - whatever the BBC and every other news outlet seems to think.
"Technology" is any tangible or material product of the human mind.
Economics: the study and practice of how scarce resources like time, energy, materials and work are distributed.
Money: an arbitrary unit that equates to a certain amount of a particular resource. Money is used to distribute resources.
Those Morris Dancers are still at it!
Labels:
culture,
definitions,
economics,
lists,
politics
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