We've moved towards Mongol-fappery nowadays.
We've moved towards Mongol-fappery nowadays.
I feel like most world systems stuff that I've read mostly consists of making dubious connections and ignoring causation. You probably have a better sense of the literature than I do though.At the time it sounded good. I'm not so sure now.
I'm reading Chernow's bio of Hamilton now. Haven't had the time to get too deeply into it. I have mixed feelings on it. On the one hand, it feels really strongly researched as to the facts. And well presented. But Chernow has this habit of tossing in little pieces of pure blind speculation. I sense that he's doing so to maybe lighten or humanize the subject some more. Bring it to life, so to speak. But to me it just kind of leaves me flat. It feels jarringly out of place in an otherwise good, well written, and detailed book.
Finally finished this. Despite the fact that I have some issues with the way the author presents things, I think it's overall a pretty strong biography. The author clearly admires Hamilton, he doesn't pull any punches where he thinks Hamilton was in the wrong. The book is probably a little too long. And he really shouldn't have put in those speculative bits. But otherwise it reads as a well researched book.
If you want a basic grounding, that'll do fine. Just keep in mind that everything in that book should be read on the understanding that most of it is wrong, simplified to the point of being useless and/or misleading. Having said that all that, you do need to grasp the basics to be able to understand the more useful stuff. Once you've done that there's a few of us with economics backgrounds who can make further recommendations.
A study in diagnosed lunacy?
It's funny how dated even books from the 90's can be. There's no internet, cameras still use microfilms, no mention of computers, so on and so forth. Still a good read though.
What do you want to look at: micro or macro; financial or industrial etc?Smellincoffee said:Having finished it recently, I'd be most interested in reccommendations to compare against it, or follow up on it.
What do you want to look at: micro or macro; financial or industrial etc?
I wonder if, as a book written in the 1990s, its authors deliberately didn't mention computers so it wouldn't be dated. Given the pace of technological change, any predictions or assumptions made today are liable to seem quaint twenty years from now, so perhaps they decided the safest course was to not mention something even as obvious as computers, relegating them to the background.