Book Suggestion: “Diaminds” is worth reading (CFAR-esque)
The reason for this submission is that I don’t think anyone who visits this website will ever read the book described below, otherwise. And that’s a shame.
Simply stated, I think CFAR curriculum designers and people who like CFAR’s approach should check out this book:
Diaminds: Decoding the Mental Habits of Successful Thinkers by Mihnea Moldoveanu
I claim that you will find illustrations of high-utility thinking styles and potentially useful exercises within. Yes, I am attempting to promote some random, highly questionable book to your attention.
You contemptuously object:
does Moldeveanu even have a secret identity?,
“decoding mental habits”?! People can’t introspect,
anyone who entitles their book “Diaminds” can’t be that smart,
and, what are you selling?
If you dig around a little bit online you’ll see that the second author writes highly rated popular business books.
If you read a little bit of the book, you’ll hear a lot about Nicholas Nassim Taleb, black swans, poorly justified claims about how the mind uses branching tree searches, and other assorted suspicious physical, mathematical, and computational analogies for how the mind works.
He even asserts that “death is inevitable” (or something like that) in the introduction. *Gasp!*
“There are 65 million titles out there. What are the chances that this particular crackpot book will be useful to me or CFAR?”
MarkL, I think your tone here is rather too defensive. (I understand why it’s somewhat defensive.)
I had a specific reason for giving the book a shot, while simultaneously I had strong evidence that I was wasting my time. I wanted to nudge people who didn’t have a specific reason to read it to consider reading it, anyway. Overkill? Doth protest too much? Maybe!
A bit too much, yeah. Over half the post is defensiveness and reasons why you might object, without refuting those objections.
Belongs in the media thread.
Nah, it’s on-topic.