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Phil in SF

kingrat@sfba.club

Joined 4 months, 1 week ago

aka @kingrat@sfba.social

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Phil in SF's books

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96% complete! Phil in SF has read 25 of 26 books.

Charan Ranganath: Why We Remember (EBook, 2024, Doubleday) 4 stars

Memory is far more than a record of the past. In this groundbreaking tour of …

semantic memories

4 stars

As I've gotten older, I have found it increasingly harder to remember nouns, particularly names. Names of companies in my industry. names of software packages and services I use frequently. My sibling's names. My girlfriend's names.

I didn't read this book with the idea that i would learn how to cure my memory difficulties. Rather, I wanted to understand in a basic way how memory works and if research backs up any method for slowing my decline.

The book solidly walked me through things. It includes descriptions of two kinds of memory: episodic and semantic. Things I experienced and might recall vs. facts I've committed to my store of knowledge. Although my memory of things I've experienced is not great, for some reason that's never bothered me. But losing common facts really makes me anxious.

Although a bit florid, i recommend the book for a mostly understandable explanation of about …

Charan Ranganath: Why We Remember (EBook, 2024, Doubleday) 4 stars

Memory is far more than a record of the past. In this groundbreaking tour of …

The selective nature of collective memory is not random- our memories become especially skewed towards those of the last voices in the room. In the lab, the recollections of groups disproportionately reflect the information recalled by those who dominate the conversation.

Why We Remember by  (35%)

Charan Ranganath: Why We Remember (EBook, 2024, Doubleday) 4 stars

Memory is far more than a record of the past. In this groundbreaking tour of …

As expected from what we knew of previous research in rats and monkeys, responses in the reward-learning circuit did not necessarily shoot up in response to the reward feedback, but rather in response to the extent to which the reward deviated from what was expected.

Why We Remember by  (Page 270 - 271)

reviewed The Affair by Lee Child (Jack Reacher, #16)

Lee Child: The Affair (EBook, 2012, Dell) 3 stars

Everything starts somewhere. For elite military cop Jack Reacher, that somewhere was Carter Crossing, Mississippi, …

The File Is Real

3 stars

A prequel set just before book 1, The Affair tells how Reacher gets pushed out of the Army. The Army sends him to Carter Crossing Mississippi, where a young woman has been murdered and the town thinks the perpetrator must've been a soldier from the nearby Kelham Army Base.

This episode takes us back to early Reacher novels, where he can't put a foot wrong at all.

Including the sex scenes. Reacher can't do wrong, but Lee Child certainly does. These should have been whittled down a lot.

reviewed Second Son by Lee Child (Jack Reacher, #15.5)

Lee Child: Second Son (EBook, 2011, Delacorte) 2 stars

A young Jack Reacher knows how to finish a fight so it stays finished. He …

An uninspired story of Reacher's childhood

2 stars

Second Son goes back to Reacher's childhood, specifically age 13 when his family is newly stationed on Okinawa. Local bullies threaten the new to town Reacher brothers. Reacher kisses a girl on the beach. Reacher acts and, worse, talks like adult Reacher. He gets to solve crimes like adult Reacher, including explaining to military investigators exactly where his father's missing code book has ended up. At age 13. Just scan right.

David McRaney: How Minds Change (AudiobookFormat, 2022, Books on Tape) 4 stars

A brain-bending investigation of why some people never change their minds—and others do in an …

Interesting ideas

4 stars

McRaney explores the psychology of persuasion, intrigued by the work of the Los Angeles LGBT Center and their Deep Canvassing technique. The other method that he covers is Street Epistemology, which isn't specifically supposed to change minds. Just make people look hard at their reasons, which if those reasons are bad maybe they'll consider changing them on their own.

The rest of the chapters explores psychological concepts around persuasion and the final chapter is one on social change and networks of human contact. That last chapter is frustrating because McRaney presents it as if the change that spreads through human social thought is inevitably positive in the long run (LGBTQ people are so accepted! Anti-vax people that really opposed covid vaccines are mostly getting vaccinated in Britain now!) The book was published in 2022, so the current backlash against trans people hadn't reached the heights it has, but we've been …

reviewed Worth Dying For by Lee Child (Jack Reacher, #15)

Lee Child: Worth Dying For (EBook, 2013, Dell) 3 stars

There’s deadly trouble in the corn county of Nebraska . . . and Jack Reacher …

Reacher trips over yet another massive criminal conspiracy

3 stars

Reacher stumbles into a rural Nebraska county while hitchhiking away from the events in 61 Hours. While drinking coffee at a rural motel bar, he overhears an alcoholic doctor turn down visiting a woman who is experiencing a nosebleed. Reacher keeps his nose out of lots of other people's business, but he suspects the woman is a domestic violence victim and badgers the doctor into visiting, with Reacher along for the ride.

The woman turns out to be the wife of a local county heavy, so Reacher is off on another adventure battling local crime bosses, much like a one man A-Team. Before the end of the book, Reacher aims to end their control, at least the terrorizing people into silence part.

Competence porn at its most ok.