Friday, August 7th, 2009
This is an encyclopedic work I bought in a local book shop and finally finished reading today. It took me a year to read from cover to cover and pages were falling out of the glue but I continued to read. Highly recommended for education and another view on human history. The review of Freud was enlightening to me because I didn’t know about the recent scholarship criticizing his work. In fact, I so liked this book that just bought it again in a hardcover version from Folio Society and start rereading it again soon.
Ideas: A History of Thought and Invention, from Fire to Freud


The second encyclopedic book seems was written before the previous one but looks like the logical sequel to it. I’m starting reading it next week.
The Modern Mind: An Intellectual History of the 20th Century


- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -
Posted in Anthropology, Art, Biology, Chemistry, Economics, Ethics, Evolution, From Cover To Cover, General Science, Geography, History, Humanities, Ideas, Language, Medicine, Philosophy, Physics, Politics, Psychology, Reading List 2009, Religion, Reviewed on Amazon, Social Sciences, Statistics, Theology | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, May 13th, 2009
It is interesting to compare core school subjects in 70-80s USSR with those in UK and Ireland. I certainly missed any religious education and many art-isms. Physical education (games) was also different except football and climbing a rope. So I bought this book in a local bookshop a few months ago to align my basic school education and finished reading yesterday while waiting in a queue in Irish visa office near Dublin O’Connell Bridge:
Homework for Grown-ups: Everything You Learnt at School…and Promptly Forgot


It was also useful for me to learn some English words from basic biology, classics and geography.
- Dmitry Vostokov @ LiterateScientist.com -
Posted in Basics, Biology, Chemistry, Economics, From Cover To Cover, General Science, Geography, Health, History, Language, Mathematics, Philosophy, Physics, Reading List 2009, Religion | 1 Comment »