Let’s crowd-source a list of books that people have found useful — particularly books outside of the “EA canon.” So please share some books that you like or have found useful!
You could also ask for recommendations on particular topics.
There are already some book recommendations on the Forum (see also LessWrong) — but many people probably haven’t seen those, and it’s been a while since the last thread like this. Even if a book has already been mentioned or discussed on the Forum, I’m probably still happy to see it here. (If it’s got its own topic page, it’s probably too well known, although I don’t mind those getting added, either, if you want to provide some commentary.)
Suggested format & info to include:
Consider using the following formats, but feel free to modify them if that's more useful:
If you’re recommending a book — see also my comment:
[Hyperlinked title] by [Author]
What/who it’s for/context: [Go here]
Why/my thoughts: [Go here]
Other notes: [Go here (are there good reviews you’re aware of?)]
If you’re asking for a recommendation — see also my comment:
🔭 Looking for good books [on topic]
Some notes on why I’m interested: [Notes]
See also:
- Reading books vs. engaging with them (Cold Takes post by Holden Karnofsky)
- Recommendations:
- Books (EA Forum topic page)
- A ranked list of all EA-relevant (audio)books I've read (MichaelA, February 2021)
- What book(s) would you want a gifted teenager to come across? (Alex Lawsen, August 2019)
- I scraped all public "Effective Altruists" Goodreads reading lists (MaxRa, March 2021)
The War with the Newts by Karel Čapek
What: This is a satirical science fiction book from 1936. (Link.)
Why: I think the book is excellent, is surprisingly on point for existential risk & non-human welfare (and the backwards way that this is approached), and more. I wrote a review of it on the Forum a while back.[1] Quoting myself: “Don’t read this book to efficiently learn what you need to know about non-human sentience or x-risk. But if you’re searching for different ways of thinking about those phenomena (and of making them real to yourself), I think this could be a great experience.”
(The fact that I love this book is basically a meme in some social circles.)