The Will to Believe
James defends the right to commit to a belief before the evidence is all in, on the grounds that waiting is itself a choice with consequences. The tension never fully resolves, which is the honest part.
Read itWilliam James
James defends the right to commit to a belief before the evidence is all in, on the grounds that waiting is itself a choice with consequences. The tension never fully resolves, which is the honest part.
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Richard Hamming
Hamming spent a career at Bell Labs watching who did great work and who didn't, then said the quiet part out loud in a talk. It asks you, fairly directly, why you aren't working on the problems that matter.
view similar →Gwern Branwen
The most patient thing on the web about how memory decays and how spacing your review fights it. Gwern writes like a one-person research department: sources, counterexamples, and the nerve to say what's still unknown.
view similar →Hacker News community
One of the rare comment threads that beats any article: hundreds of people naming the book that rewired them, and saying why. More trustworthy than any list an algorithm would hand you.
view similar →Michael Nielsen
Nielsen on how notations and interfaces don't just record thoughts but change which thoughts are possible. Not about productivity — about the shape of cognition itself.
view similar →Isaiah Berlin
Berlin takes a scrap from a Greek poet — the fox knows many things, the hedgehog one big thing — and turns it into a way of seeing how minds work. He pretends it's a parlour game and then takes it entirely seriously.
view similar →George Orwell
Orwell's argument that vague, prefabricated language is both a symptom and a cause of muddled thinking, with rules you'll resent because they work. Every generation rediscovers it and goes on writing badly anyway.
view similar →George Orwell
Less quoted than his famous essays and more unsettling: Orwell on how orthodoxy of any flavour quietly makes honest writing impossible. You can feel him thinking it through rather than reciting a conclusion.
view similar →John Stuart Mill
The chapter on free thought and discussion is the strongest case ever made for letting even wrong opinions speak — because your right ones go dead without the argument. Mill assumes you can follow a long chain of reasoning, and rewards the effort.
view similar →W. K. Clifford
Clifford's shipowner, who talks himself into believing his leaky vessel is sound and sends it to sea, is one of philosophy's great cautionary images. He pushes the principle further than you'll be comfortable with, which is the whole point.
view similar →Max Weber
Weber's lecture to students on what a life in scholarship actually costs — the long odds, the disenchantment, the absence of any guaranteed payoff. Bracingly free of comfort.
view similar →William James
James's lectures arguing that the meaning of an idea is the difference it makes in practice. He thinks out loud and brings you along, so it reads less like doctrine than a mind working in real time.
view similar →John Henry Newman
Newman trying to say what a university is actually for, beyond training and credentials. The question hasn't aged a day, and few have answered it this seriously since.
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