User Profile

Library Liberty Zed

LibZed@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 1 month ago

Ich musste mein anderes Konto schließen, weil es voll war. Ich interessiere mich für Anarchismus, alternative Ökonomie, Geschichte und Neurowissenschaften. Lese hierzu querbeet und nicht nur die üblichen Verdächtigen, um die Frage zu beantworten, wie können wir freier werden.

I had to close my other account because it was full. I am interested in anarchism, alternative economics, history and neuroscience. Read across the board and not just the usual suspects to answer the question, how can we become more free.

English/German

This link opens in a pop-up window

Library Liberty Zed's books

View all books

User Activity

Wretched Refuse? (2021, Cambridge University Press) 4 stars

The polital economy of immigration and institutions

4 stars

You have to eat some capitalist axioms for this book and be kinda proficient in statistics. The Plot: Migrants moving from countries with low productivity to high productivity nations increase wealth. Do they increase wealth for all? Yes, even the population in the destination country. but wait....what about: Do the migrants bring the things, institutions, beliefs which caused the low productivity in their home country to the destination country? (New economic case against immigration) Benjamin and Alex: Could be... Let's see...no, actually not. Free migration increases wealth. One part suprised me: Apparently there is correlation between diversity (as in diverse migrants) and union membership. There is a case for low Unionism in USA and high Immigration.

Apple II Age (2023, University of Chicago Press) 4 stars

Publisher’s description: An engrossing origin story for the personal computer—showing how the Apple II’s software …

PC as a business case

3 stars

The author does not warm up an ideological debate what the personal computer could have been. Instead she tells the story of the massification of pcs as a business story as the USA tried to revigorate its economy after the two oil crises. See the excerpts. As a European it is to be said: It's a solely American book.

Kiruna forever (Swedish language, 2020, Arkitektur Förlag, ArkDes) 4 stars

'Kiruna Forever' examines the current relocation of the city through the works of architects, urban …

If you know Kiruna, I recommend this book

4 stars

I have personal ties to Kiruna/Giron (signaling), which is interestingly one of the most important cities in Sweden. If you have no interest in Kiruna, modernity AND european colonialism, this book won't do much for you. Special Interest all the way.

Also sprach Golem (German language, 2001, Suhrkamp) 4 stars

Eine KI schreibt eine Menscheitsgeschichte

4 stars

Eigentlich ein langes Essay, in der Stanislaw Lem, eine Menschheitsgeschichte schreibt, bzw. die Menschheitsgeschichte von einem überklugen Wesen erzählen lässt. Es geht viel um Arroganz, Selbst-Inthronisierung und - ich nenne es mal - kybernetisches Denken. Es ist interessant zu lesen, aber man merkt auch, dass es 50 Jahre alt ist und die geschilderten Ideen weniger stark überraschend wirken. Stanislaw Lem war im besten Sinne seiner Zeit voraus.

Foucault in California (2019, Heyday) 3 stars

A Hagiography

3 stars

The best part of the book is the preface. Heather Dundas writes how she heard an anecdote about Foucault and an LSD trip, found it so implausible that she tried to convict the anecdote of lying, and in the process surprisingly proved the existence of the LSD trip. The rest of the book is the story of a self-described disciple (!) who invites Foucault to a local college. So much status play, references, intellectual babble, show who you know, written in a gonzo style. If you're not impressed by it, it's quite funny. Foucault chops wood to demonstrate his ordinarity. When Foucault talks about attractive boys, one feels different in view of the accusations against Foucault. The book is a perfect example of hagiography and in this sense is recommended.

The Ministry for the Future (Paperback, 2021, Orbit) 4 stars

Established in 2025, the purpose of the new organization was simple: To advocate for the …

Basically no plot, but a panoply of ideas

3 stars

Actually, the book has no real plot. On the basis of two persons, the book presents psychological trauma caused by climate change and how a high bureaucrat tries to convince other executives to act. Interspersed are short essays. Admittedly, I skipped about a third of the book due to repetition. I would have liked more plot. In the end, there is hope that somehow it will work out, but many sacrifices must be made along the way. What is problematic about the book is that while societies or masses are subjects, they are somehow very manipulated, reactive, history is written by the elite, which takes away a lot agency.

Reality Is Not What It Seems (Paperback, 2017, Penguin Books) 4 stars

What are the elementary ingredients of the world? Do time and space exist? And what …

What have physicists done in the last 100 years for Non-Physicist

4 stars

Obviously, the public is interested in what the 10,000 researching physicists are doing: the image of a black hole, Higgs boson, etc. This book explains what physicists have been up to for the last 100 years and how our everyday understanding is being overturned as a result. To illustrate this, the author uses the history of physical thinking in antiquity and from modern times onwards. I highly enjoyed enjoyed reading the book and learned a great deal. It cured my anger about "emanzipatorische Wissenschaftskritik", which was just a "mutual admiration sub reddit" in my opinion.

Emanzipatorische WIssenschaftskritik (deutsch language, Mandelbaum) 2 stars

»Die Gedanken der herrschenden Klasse sind in jeder Epoche die herrschenden Gedanken.« Dieser Satz von …

Book of straw men

2 stars

As in most books of "Kritische Theorie" the basal argument is: Science happens in capitalism, therefore as a whole facilitates capitalism. The essays were written by historians and philosophers - and it shows. For example, "Sensual fullness and spiritual potency are corrupted and amputated by data." They don't try to prove their point in cases like quantum physics or neuroscience, which tells. They don't mention AI in a book which was published 2022!

A few essays treat empiric questions, for example does electromagnetic radiation harm, are vaccinations helpful? But in such a one-sided and shallow way! There is no weighing in evidence. A text about psychoneuroimmunology claims, that the ibuprofen was a main driver in the covid pandemic by shutting down sickness behaviour - without any attempt to prove this claim. The feminist critique of science is good, but more historical. The essays don't try to distinguish science, scientifc method …