Educational books that are good for reading on the daily commute?
I really enjoyed all of Brian Greens work. I just finished 17 equations that changed the world vy Ian Stewart... Which I really enjoyed except for the fact he was so personal and pushed his beliefs so hard. He didn't just state the science for the readers consideration, but pushed and pushed.
Anyone have some good reads to suggest?
P. S. If you haven't read Greens work, try to make time to do so.
>>56954046
>He stated in an interview with Lawrence Krauss that he is of Jewish heritage
dropped
>>56954117
You just wrote the word Jewish. Dropped
Reading this atm.
>>56954152
well meme'd
>>56954197
Looks interesting. How is he as an author?
>>56954356
He doesn't have the know-how to write about AI but I tried to read Superintelligence by Bostrom and it bored me to death (Bostrom is not a native English speaker), Barrat is a much better (as in interesting) writer.
So it's up to you if you want the highly technical stuff or a more interesting read where you can actually read up a bit on the people behind AI and learn a thing or two.