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D0TheMath's avatar

I would add textbooks to the list of books that are worth reading. Not always, but often its the best way to learn a complex new field. Open to suggestions of alternative formats, like reading papers--though if you want an intro & problems, textbooks are still great.

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Sebastian's avatar

This is a supremely silly post. Not everyone reads books in order to optimise their life and/or compress as much knowledge into as little room as possible. For me, reading is a pleasure in itself, and reading a well-written, well-structured and well-thought-out text has intrinsic value, regardless of whether its ideas could've been expressed more succinctly.

When I want to learn about a particular topic, I'd rather read three hundred pages with examples and detail and even repetition, than a five page essay that I'll surely forget within a few weeks. The longer form aids memory and makes points and ideas stick; you spend way more time with the material at hand.

Also, why use such a contemptuous and morally bankrupt character as Bankman-Fried to make your case?

I do agree that many books are mostly fluff and it's a known fact that getting a short book published is a lot harder than a long one, because of how publishing works, but this does not make a case "against most books". Not even close. Many books are not worth reading and they contain little value in them, but this is an entirely different matter, and the wild generalization made in the post strikes me as lazy, more than anything.

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