Comments on The Most Influential Books - page 2
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The New Testament is more difficult, because there isn't one or two defining collections. Maybe Codex Alexandrinus? See here for more on the problem.
Note that while the Authorized or King James version has been the most influential among Protestant English speakers, it hasn't been the most influential among the majority of the world that doesn't speak English.


A very sound argument!


na just kidding
:-)
YOU ARE totally meaningless, unenlightened and subjective haaaaaaa!!!!!!!!!
HOW FUNNY WAS THAT



Anyone can vote.

I have created a new group called Goodreads All Sorts and I'd love for people to join it or just even just give it a look. It's a group that discusses anything and everything. There will be monthly group reads, movies, and music. There is a folder for everything you could think of. I'd really like if people could spread the word because I'd love for the group to be a success. Here is the link to the group:
http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/9...
Thanks very much,
Jack :-)

But... anyone who didn't sleep through their history classes already knows this. Thus, this list is fun to scoff at, but one shouldn't put much stock in how books are ranked on here.



I had the same thought. BTW, I have a cat named Talyn. :P


You've hit on the Eurocentric nature of GR and its players. Add the Indian epics to the list.

The Ramayana
The Bible
The Quran
The Analects of Confucius (not even on this list for some reason)
Just so all the narrow minded people that are questioning why such books are on this list, people do exist in other countries and million upon millions have been influenced by these books over thousands of year.



So faith in humanity is restored when the book that tells us that we are descended from the apes is at nr. 1? I prefer the book that tells us that God has set us apart from all the other animals. Sounds like a lot more faith in humanity to me.


yeah.?"
If you ask me this poll is very inflamable... dont get me wrong, if it were inflable AND had a point id be happy, but books are so subj..."
Quaran, I slogged through it, but influential, yes. I did not vote for it though. I fyou view the world, and history, as a whole it is meaningful, but not overwhelming. The bible has the force of western civilization behind it, but good, not great literature.




Surprised Twilight and Harry Potter haven't made their way to the top 100 yet! :o)"
Um, Harry Potter is #29.

Isn't that assuming everyone read the complete series...?


Evolution theory has not influenced the lives of millions of people as Bible and Quran. yet George Orwell is more influential than Dante, Homer, Newton and Martin Luther? really?


Problem is, you don't take the right frame of reference when you talk about these books.
According to what right can you assert than politics is better viewed than popular culture? I'm sorry to say, but this is a very elitist way of thinking.
Thanks to Conan Doyle, MILLIONS of ppl whatch the series "Sherlock". And you know what? I'm almost sure that half of these ppl don't give a shit about Rousseau or Marx.
To be frank, I don't. I find it dry, badly written literature and I don't care about what they say, and I found the topic extremely boring. So in a way, I would be more like 19th century middle class reader who enjoys penny dreadful and who dislikes politics.
Does that make me a person less capable of thinking? I don't think so. Actually I hate reading newspapers because a lot of what you see written in it is bullshit, many, many journalists write what they think without checking on their sources. Look at the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris last january, it's exactly what happened.
And you know what? Marx and Rousseau had their own opinions, and I'm pretty sure some parts of their books are unaccurate, because they see everything through the prism of their own thinking. The reason why I don't like them is because I find them dogmatic. Which is rarely the case with a work of fiction.
It doesn't mean I don't respect these authors and admire how influential they were for 19th century society.
There's a HUGE difference about recognising the degree of influence of some work and your OWN opinion about it. Try to think about that before patronizing ppl who favour Sherlock Holmes over The Capital.

Problem is, you don't take the right frame of reference wh..."
You go, Lucinda! I've learned more from fiction - including Sherlock Holmes - than from reading any dry political treatise.

I learned nothing reading The Confessions, hated it, I stopped half way through.
It doesn't mean I think it had no impact on Western culture.

Isn't it always? :-) Goes for every Lisopia, I'd say.

Isn't it always? :-) Goes for every Lisopia, I'd say."
Yep.

Harry Potter certainly is influential by any normal meaning of the word. I just don't think it comes close to making the top one hundred.