What are some Jow Forums approved books? Unironically

What are some Jow Forums approved books? Unironically.

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georgesoros.com/2014/01/13/fallibility-reflexivity-and-the-human-uncertainty-principle-2/
fin.shufe.edu.cn/finance/citibank/金融工程与金融经济学/book/Margin of safety.pdf
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

anything by nassim taleb

"The Phenomenology of Spirit" by G.W.F. Hegel.

The Sovereign Individual is /ourbook/

1. Control Everyone with Hypnosis (2012)
2. The Problems of Work (2007)
3. Corporate Magick (2002)
4. Dow 40,000 (1999)
5. Countdown Y2K (1998)
6. The Enron Story (1990)
7. The Fifth Generation (1983)
8. Atlas Shrugged (1957)

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Communist manifesto

Real Talk
>Principles - Ray Dalio
>basically: You need to write write down the things you observe in life - these are the 'criteria for decision making'. Everything in the wold can be thought of as a 'machine' therefore history DOES repeat, which means there's common root causes. Focus on those and not ephemeral symptoms of problems. Accept there are limitations to you knowledge and steal the best ideas from the most trustworthy people.Don't just ask people for their opinion, instead ask them for their reasoning. Ask multiple people for their reasoning. You can have anything you want, but not everything you want. Stay goal focused, don't get sucked down into means - focus on ends.
I can't recommend this book enough for Jow Forumsrealis

>Leading Apple with Steve Jobs - Jay Elliot
>How to hire people, motivated them. Lots of practical tips and tricks you can learn if you pay attention to the anecdotes. Jobs was a dick, he's not a good model for businessmen - but you can learn so much from him.

>ANYTHING by Ted Levitt
>The dude came up with 'Marketing Myopia' his most famous article is a must read for any businessman.

georgesoros.com/2014/01/13/fallibility-reflexivity-and-the-human-uncertainty-principle-2/
A different view on markets, both Dalio and Soros are implicitly or theoretically against the Austrian School in that Dalio believes that you can find patterns in history, and that Soros believes in 'reflexivity' where market sentiment or belief can have positive and negative affects on 'objective' market realities. Good to get a grip on all sides and as Dalio would say - triangulate the criteria.

pdf's pls?
can't find most on the internet

how do i learn to finish a book?

NO SEE NO DOSTOEVSKY IN THERE FREN

Firstly you only read books that actually interest you or where there is specific you want to learn from it, that you can articulate. Once you've nailed that down...
You gamify it.
>2 chapters today. 2 chapters tomorrow....
>I have to finish reading this chapter before I can go out tonight... uhhh uhh... oh know, this is a long chapter!? FUCK!
>Hmm I think I'll read this short chapter while I'm waiting.

If you use a lot of public transport, always keep a PDF or physical book with you. I read SOOoooOoooOOooo much in college this way.

Any books on personal finance? Preferably for retards new to the real world

>Atlus shrugged
>Ayn Rand
>Ever

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Kiyosaki book

fuck that what a fucking pervert

Thanks bruv

fucking kek at that stack

yuppie/10

>Structure of Scientific Revolutions
Kuhn
>Discipline and Punish
Foucault

>Basic Economics
Sowell
>Road to Serfdom
Hayek
>Rules for Radicals
Alinsky

>1984
Orwell

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>The Sovereign Individual by James Davidson
>fin.shufe.edu.cn/finance/citibank/金融工程与金融经济学/book/Margin of safety.pdf

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>Critique of Pure Reason
Kant

>Being and Time
Heidegger

>Genealogy of Morals
Nietzsche

>Dao De Jing
Lao Tzu

>The Way of Zen
Alan Watts

>The Upanishads

>The Illiad
Homer

All good. Anything in particular you're interested in learning about? I may be able to help you with specifics.

Your Net worth. Projected 2018 income. And how these books helped you to financial independence NAO!

same question for you too slick

Ahhh the Jow Forums bible

I'd recommend Atlas Shrugged. Just don't bother reading anything else that Ayn Rand wrote. Her philosophical objectivism is unoriginal amateur garbage.

Unironically George soros book

This. Why wouldn't you learn from one of the best? or if you're a Jow Forumsack or literally voted for Orban: Why wouldn't you want to KNOW THY ((((ENEMY))))?

im gonna throw in a fiction book that i enjoyed, helped me take chances and it actually manifested into some IRL cult so to speak.

it's called the dice man and it's about a psychiatrist who slowly turns sociopathic by letting his life choices be decided by the roll of a dice.

>And how these books helped you to financial independence NAO!

Each of those books changed the way I think about things and filter information.

If there's any book in particular, or a particular subject matter that you want to know about, I can tell you why I listed each of them.

If you don't know shit about economics, Basic Economics. It's an easy read. No equations.

>I'd also highly recommend a weekly subscription to the Economist magazine.
Read that shit cover-to-cover each week and in a few months you'll be completely up to speed on everything happening in the world.

If you fall for the "Scientists Say" meme, Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Plus, we're in the midst of a technological revolution. It helps to have perspective on how revolutions happen.

go to the library they have all the subscriptions on the shelves, nice way to get out of the house. get a coffee and sit reading all the new headlines, you were going there anyways to pick up your newest queued book that arrived right?

i used to be a library sperg i made a program that added every book i wanted to read on my goodreads account into a queue ordering them for me. i would have a new one every couple days there.

Necromancer

>go to the library
I read when I shit, and I assume other people do too. I don't read library books. I buy all of my books from Amazon.

Two Questions which I have carefully thought out reasons for asking:
What's your net worth and your projected income for 2018?
Which book (no more than two suggestions, but do go into as much detail or as little as you please for each) is most relevant and practically applicable to a content maker seeking to establish a 'personal brand' (probably through social media but not exclusively) who doesn't have much exposure? but does have a relatively clear idea of audience, brand, aesthetics etc.

good call on the econ/library for free sub thing.

>stacking your books like that

Anons, hit me up with your knowledge requests and I will try and use my vast reading to tailor a reading suggestion just for you!

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People were shilling me "The richest man in Babylon"
Its really beginner tier economics and didnt bring anything interesting or new to the table.

I can recommend pic related. Was funny / sad / to the bone of todays reality and can be translated onto any western country.
Also it gives good advice on how to collect welfare / neet bucks

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>1. Control everyone with hypnos
/stopreading

probz good decision

>Also it gives good advice on how to collect welfare / neet bucks

im in.

all 12 volumes for that matter

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Not sure. That's pretty specific. I think any of the ones listed would help you. Maybe Aristotle's Rhetoric. If you've never read any philosophy, I'd start with Bertrand Russell's History of Western PHilosophy. Skip the part in the middle about Church doctrine.

Based

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>Not sure. That's pretty specific.
Damn.
>Maybe Aristotle's Rhetoric.
Read it like 3 times.
>If you've never read any philosophy,
I've read plenty of philosophy, but I've chosen to stop for... reasons.

The Outsiders. Stay gold Ponyboy.

By content provider, do you mean writing articles and making videos? Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain were both famous content providers of their day. Franklin's autobiography is great. Self-taught, and one of the greatest Americans.

When he opened his own printing press, and before he had much business, he bought much more paper each week than he needed. He made sure to transport it down the main street during peak traffic so that everyone would see him and think he had the business to support all of the paper he was buying.

Unironically this

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The biographies of Buffet,Munger,Ponzi,Livermore. The reports of the shit stock traders around 1700. "When money dies" about the Weimar republic and the dissolving austrohungarian empire. "Where are the customer yachts" History does not repeat it self, but it rhymes.

Typical communist has only read one book. Exposed to by do nothing professors, doesn't read on own so knows nothing else.

>I've chosen to stop
What reasons? Why would anyone stop reading philosophy? Everything else is pregame.

Not to mention the fact that if you want to be a Marxist, Das Kapital is the prereq reading.

>tfw you start reading the Turner Diaries pdf on a whim one night in order to ironically enjoy some boomer WN 1.0 cringe straight from the tap and before you know it the sun is up and you have to wagecuck in ninety minutes
This book is amazing. I went in expecting the worst but my preconceived notions were obliterated. It was so refreshing to read a somewhat serious story from /ourperspective/ as opposed to funny articles and memey shitposts. You really should read The Turner Diaries if you haven't. It's enjoyable if you're redpilled, but don't share with normies as some of the depictions of violence might be off-putting for the uninitiated.

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Das Kapital is super boring full of econ stuff. Marx was literally autistic about every little econ definition. Reading makes you insane, thats how communist are created

>By content provider, do you mean writing articles and making videos?
Close enough

>
When he opened his own printing press, and before he had much business, he bought much more paper each week than he needed. He made sure to transport it down the main street during peak traffic so that everyone would see him and think he had the business to support all of the paper he was buying.
Ha! Now that's image management!

Because I found that I wasn't able to engage with real life anymore, every new concept or theory would become a preoccupation - a reverberating mantra that didn't cease. It was like living inside of a prodcast created by uninformed first year philosophy grads. It was fucking awful. It dulled the joy of life as I became fixated on the abstract 'big' questions.

The labour theory of value has been trashed, so Marx is irrelevant now.

>Foucault

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Any opinons on Max Stirner