
I have seen a lot of the thousand and one nights of the road chief, and I myself like this kind of show, walking alone on the streets of the city at night, holding a book to the audience in front of the camera, the background contains the slightly noisy sounds of the street, and I can occasionally see the curious eyes of passers-by behind the camera.
Eight points is another audio recommendation program of the governor, which is shorter in time and more concise in content. This book is the text version of the eight-point program. Edited by Phoenix Books. I didn't hear much, so turning to this book is still very fresh.
The book is about turning audio programs into text, so you can see a lot of colloquial sentences. When I read this book, the voice of the governor always sounded involuntarily in my head, as if I was really listening to the program.
Because this is a recommended book, there is nothing to say about the content, which is a personal book list plus book review. If you don't know what books you can read, then it is also good to look at the books in the catalog and turn them over.
One of the interesting places is the critique of Currency Wars, which I had always thought was a book written by a foreigner, and now I know that it's just a patchwork of garbage written by a native. If it's not necessary, don't go see it well.
Some interesting excerpts:
Nowadays, in our time, there are too many options for entertainment, and a person actually runs to read a book, indicating that he is not only holding the purpose of entertainment, but also wants to improve himself.
We often think of creation as too romantic, thinking that it is a burst of personal inspiration, an explosive process, and thus ignoring that true creation cannot rely only on aura and talent, but also on others.
It turns out that the cause we pursue all our lives will eventually decline and die. There is only one thing that is true, and that is the joy of pursuing knowledge, which is worth our dedication to.
Philosophy is not written learning, philosophy is a way of life.
The first is our ignorance, and the second is our fear, and we are always afraid of what we are ignorant of.
It turns out that knowledge is not neutral, and the same books, the same knowledge, are manifested, conceived, and even described by different people when they are different, and that knowledge cannot exist independently of the human body.