Swapnam’s
Comments
(group member since Dec 18, 2024)
Swapnam’s
comments
from the Serious science and mathematics readings group.
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Deadline to submit your books is upcoming Sunday midnight, Greenwich time. We will begin reading on Monday, unless everyone has already voted earlier and we are in agreement on the final choice.
I have added all the above books to the group's bookshelf, so that we can revisit them later. Members can also freely add books there, do remember to shelve them under "to-read".

First and foremost, I'd like to say I’m very excited to explore some of the most pressing questions in physics and philosophy with kindred spirits!
My name is Ana, and I am an en..."
Welcome to the group Ana! It is clear you'll have much of value to say here, at least until the New Year enthusiasm fades away, tee hee :)
My local library has Mandelbrot's "The Fractal Geometry of Nature" (another one of the half-read-got-interrupted-by-life). I hope that is acceptable as a substitute.

I was waiting for the new year to start before embarking upon our first collective reading project on this group. It seems there are 5 of us here, and we may fancy ourselves as the founding fathers and mothers of what will hopefully grow into a huge family of science lovers.
Please leave a small note about yourself. Also suggest upto five books that you may wish the group to read in January, in preference order. I will create a poll on basis of those. Please try to suggest stuff easily accessible in a popular bookstore or on Kindle, and hopefully costing less than a television.
My name is Swapnam and I currently work for S&P Global in Amsterdam as a Software Developer. I have a Masters in Computer Science, so my interests lean heavily towards the mathematical sciences and the issues of interpretation and philosophy surrounding them. I am also an avid lover of art and love going to museums and perusing through art theory/history to make my visits more illuminating (ditto for music).
I think the profound truths unearthed in the sciences and the transcendent patterns discovered by artists are two sides of the same coin, and the only activities that bring joy, meaning and purpose in our ephemeral human lives. I hope I can learn a beautiful thing or two from you all.
The books I suggest are :
1. Philosophy of Physics - Quantum Theory, Tim Maudlin : Self contained
2. Quantum Mechanics and Experience, David Albert : Self contained
3. General Relativity, The Theoretical Minimum, Leonard Susskind : needs some knowledge of Special Relativity, beginner friendly otherwise
4. The Beginning of Infinity, David Deustch : I have often heard the AGI community talk in concepts/ideology borrowed from here, whether consciously or otherwise
5. The Alignment Problem : The least technical book on this list, but perhaps the most pragmatic and topical