Ask HN: Which textbooks gave a new dimension to your thinking process?
Have you read any textbooks that totally made you fall in love with a subject that you knew nothing about and made you further study about it? Or gave you a new mental model to think about things in a different and useful way?
Mention those textbooks and a bit about why that subject may be useful to learn.
13 comments
[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 36.7 ms ] threadBasically every humanities scholar complains about the complexity of the issue, like social of political, just because of them not knowing linear algebra as a tool. You can solve almost all problem using matrix and tensor.
Solving them is the hard part;)
1st one being "Thinking fast and slow" by Daniel Kahneman - completely reshaped my model of how much we are in control of our thought process.
2nd one was "Thus spoke Zarathustra" by Nietzsche - which is a very difficult read. Overall Nietzsche's approach to philosophy just immediately resonated with me and sent me down a path of thought that's still the foundation of my world model today. The whole approach of seeing life as inherently meaningless so meaning can be chosen at will was a great thing to have growing up. You definitely don't need to read the book to get there though - just reading a summary of what Nietzsche is about will probably be enough.
Operating Systems: Three Easy Pieces + Linux Device Drivers 3rd: All the cool tech in my opinion is made with systems-programming. Game-engines, Risk/Pricing Engines, Radar/GPS, Compilers, VM's, OS's, probably also Apples AR goggles are made with systems languages, so likely/sadly C and C++. These two books are real and practical. The Linux one is outdated, but it worked for me.
Oppenheimers books on Signals and Systems: Because signal-processing. And the Fourier-Transformation is the most unintuitive AND useful piece of mathematics I have used/seen. (Stochastic Integrals is a close second)
Differential Equations. ODE's, SDE's, PDE's. I don't really have a good book here sadly, but Differential Equations describe the world.
Not directly a textbook per se, but was a deeply educational book for me about designing digital spaces and thinking about interface metaphors from a real-world, architecture-driven perspective.
Still waiting for the Physics one, though!