The odds that any particular person will always be right are basically zero. It's way more likely that you're just consuming things that reinforce prior beliefs and make you feel good.
Make sure that you're periodically engaging with people who challenge your beliefs.
Walter Jackson Freeman III: https://web.archive.org/web/20160627160850/http://sulcus.ber...
Eric Schwitzgebel: http://www.faculty.ucr.edu/~eschwitz/
Walter Segal: http://www.segalbuildings.me.uk/
Adam Smith
David Graeber
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLB5ShJRcpNFPz_2uazuT4XJ3y...
I didn’t think it possible to learn this much this quickly.
And in particular there is a 3-volume series that was available for a few years that put together a lot of the work he had done during his lifetime, even though his most popular seemed to be "As a Man Thinketh".
The Wisdom of James Allen I, II, and III: https://www.amazon.com/Wisdom-James-Allen-Including-Prosperi... https://www.amazon.com/Wisdom-James-Allen-Difficulties-Trium... https://www.amazon.com/Wisdom-James-Allen-III-Heavenlylife/d...
It's been a number of years since I last read them, and unfortunately the publisher above went out of business so you can generally only find the titles above used, but I did enjoy the philosophy/thinking shared in the writing, even if their titles may indicate a somewhat religious slant, overall I'd say the writings focus more on leading a good life.
This is a good reminder I should read them again to refresh my memory on all that is discussed within the pages however, since it has been probably over 15+ years since I first read them thoroughly.
He has known a lot of powerful people, so when he discusses world events, he doesn't need to talk out of his behind. He's a serious enough scholar that there's substance behind his views.
He's not particularly iconoclastic. His opinions are mildly progressive, nothing outlandish.
What I value about him is that he's relentlessly reasonable, and that's hard to find online.
Ben Goertzel
Joscha Bach
Michael Munger
Michael Posner
Miguel Nicolelis
Melanie Mitchell
They way he lay out and clearly communicate complex topics literally awe inspiring.
It is a deep pleasure to read and listen to him.
Spent years proving 1+1=2, and delved deep into the intersection between reason and philosophy.
Mostly resonates with me because he seems to freely challenge established norms in very thought provoking ways.
Daniel Schmachtenberger gave me a strong heads up on societal energy blindness
Kevlin Henney taught me far more about programming than I thought I even needed to know. I'll never approach multi-threaded programming the same way again.
Eric Weinstein made me aware of the embedded growth obligations that have de-ranged so many of our institutions. It was quite a wake-up call.
John McWhorter, whom I admire very much as a person and a thinker.
[0] = The Law by Bastiat https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Gob_pa3BAU
Alan Turing for model of computation
Kurt Gödel for incompleteness theorem
Erwin Schrödinger for "What is life?" book
Hugh Everett for many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics
Seth Lloyd for ultimate physical limits to computation
John von Neumann for self-replicating spacecraft or von Neumann probe
Robin Hanson for Grabby Aliens model
Nick Bostrom for idea of existential risk
Richard Dawkins for many God debates and books
John Stuart Mill for Harm principle
Elon Musk for rockets reusability
Diogenes for simplicity and Diogenes and Alexander anecdote
Horace for Exegi monumentum poemThis one?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominic_Cummings_scandal#:~:te....
Public bullshitter perhaps but I wouldn't have him down as a public thinker
For example, I like Heloise d’Argenteuil. Her view on marriage being contractual prostitution was a fun & thought provoking read back in my college days. However, she's hardly my favorite thinker.
Francis Xavier is my favorite public thinker. That's not because he's the greatest thinker that ever lived (I'd put Democritus as that one), but rather because he's one of the founders of the order of monks that educated me in high-school/college. He's who I resonate with. It's not a value judgment.
I guess we identify ourself to them easier.
Douglass Rushkoff (techno-anarchy, collectivism)
Charles Eisenstein (ecosystems)
Duncan Trussel (mysticysm, spirituality)
Richard Rour (non-dual religiosity)
Tara Brach (meditation)
Sharon Salzburg (meditation)
Jane McAlevey (organizer)
Also this thread is an ideological doxxing but it’s hilarious
He mostly takes concepts (from a board range of fields), and abuses them, and it turns out to be funny.
He has fundamentally changed some of my values and thoughts about me, the world and my place within it.
Highly recommend some lectures or talks from him.
Ayn Rand
Elon Musk
Eric Weinstein
Jordan Peterson
Joscha Bach
Noam Chomsky
Paul Graham
Yeah that's cheesy, but his essays had a big influence on me and is the reason I'm on this forum.
Peter ThielThomas Sowell
What ideas from Rand, Musk and Thiel in particular?
Bach has interesting ideas - I enjoy listening to him.
Peter Thiel: His contrarian views enlightened me many many times, for example his views that higher education is not a temple of knowledge anymore, but a big elitist economic bubble. I also suggest you read his book Zero to One, I liked it a lot.
Elon Musk: One could argue he's not really a thinker, since he's working so much on his businesses. Even so, it's evident that he thinks a lot and very deeply. He's willing to figure out the big picture of what's good for humanity and go all-in on it.
Rand: Her philosophy and her system of values which is in a deep contrast with what is preached everywhere else. This would be a start: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQVrMzWtqgU
Nicholas Taleb (skeptic/economist), Alexander Wales (rationalist author), /r/rational (rationalist fiction), Chapo Trap House podcast (leftist politics, comedy), Richard D Wolff (economist), Stephen West (philosophy historian), Jonathan Blow (game designer, skeptic programmer), Vitalik Buterin (kinda the only crypto person I trust who is genuinely smart)
Then of course Noam Chomsky / Slavoy Zizek (famously-rigorously-intelligent leftists). William Macaskill (Effective Altruism, moral utilitarianism at its finest). Adam Curtis (prescient documentary-style reporter).
Long list to not have a female on... feelsbad. Um - not sure how to change that - it seems like at least partially a general topic of interest thing? Not so many women in the philosophy/tech/economics/world-politics space? Kinda should actively search for that now tbh
Edit: I was downvoted to negatives presumably for saying "ngl some cringe names around here"... referring of course to the much larger collection of Rand and Peterson fans than I expected. I have since acknowledged my mistake, that use of woke terms like "cringe" in this neutral-thought safe-space is itself clearly a far greater crime and thus my post should be cancelled, and there is no irony in that or inherent political bias embedded in the platform by maintaining such neutrality as sacrosanct above passive-aggressive behavior like mine
A lot of the books being recommended during the heights of BLM were also by women, so you can probably cast your net into that topic and get a good haul.
Personally I'm more into finding good works rater than just an author to worship, so here's a fun little ditty critiquing american defence intellectuals: https://www.qub.ac.uk/Research/GRI/mitchell-institute/FileSt...