I realise this isn’t directly EA-relevant but I am interested to see what people in the EA community specifically have read that genuinely changed their life for the better (in any way, as long as it was significant to you).
I expect most answers will be non-fiction, and perhaps self-help books, but any type of book goes.
Here is a list of books that were plausibly life-changing for me, personally (link also includes other recommended books). It’s too soon to tell if the changes were positive, but I like to believe that they were.
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This was not true for me, personally. Self-help books were, for whatever reason, unusually low on the list of books that were life-changing for me, or that I expect to be life-changing for me in the future.
Here’s how I justified the list:
I also read Animorphs! I saw this tweet about it recently that was pretty funny.
Great question. Keen to see other people’s recommendations. We have a list of some of our team’s favorites organized into categories – can be seen on the website here or below. My personal top 5 are Principles, Made to Stick, The Life You Can Save, Algorithms to Live By, and The Lean Startup.
Charity entrepreneurship
CE Handbook: How to Start a High-Impact Nonprofit
The Lean Startup
Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World
Epic Measures: One Doctor. Seven Billion Patients
Values and ethics
Enlightenment Now
The Life You Can Save
Animal Liberation
EA Handbook
The Animal Activist’s Handbook
Poor Economics
More Than Good Intentions
Doing Good Better
The Power of Others
Making good decisions
How to Measure Anything
Principles
Failing in the Field: What We Can Learn When Field Research Goes Wrong
Statistics Done Wrong
How to Lie With Statistics
Future Babble
Black Swan
Thinking, Fast and Slow
Rationality: From AI to Zombies
Algorithms to Live By
Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality
Decisive: How to Make Better Choices in Life and Work
Thanks for the Feedback: The Science and Art of Receiving Feedback Well
Communications
Made to Stick
The Frog and Prince
Never Eat Alone
How to Win Friends and Influence People
Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion
Crucial Conversations
Getting things done
Getting Things Done
Atomic Habits
The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right
The New One Minute Manager
The Little Book of Stoicism
The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable
Upstream: The Quest to Solve Problems Before They Happen
I’ve got a few:
GEB
Put me on the path to something like thinking of rationality as something intuitive/S1 rather than something I have to think about with a lot of deliberation/S2.
Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
I often forget how much this book is “in the water” for me. There’s all kinds of great stuff in here about prioritization, relationships, and self-improvement. It can feel a little like platitudes at time, but it’s really great.
The Design of Everyday Things
This is kind of out there, but this gave me a strong sense of the importance of grounding ideas in their concrete manifestation. It’s not enough to have a good idea; the effects it causes in the world have to actually have the desired good effects, too.
Getting Things Done
There’s alternatives to this, but it made my life better by really helping me adopt a “systems first” mindset to realize that I can improve my life by using systems/procedures and having them well defined and as automatic as possible pays dividends over time.
The Evolving Self
A very dense book about adult developmental psychology. Doesn’t necessarily lay out the best possible model of adult psychological development, but it really got me deep on this and set me on a path that made my life much better.
Siddhartha
Okay, one book of fiction, but it’s a coming of age story and contains something like suggestions for how to relate to your own life. This one was a slow burn for me: I didn’t realize the effect it had had on me until I reread it years later.
I think I’ve mentioned a few times on the Forum that Strangers Drowning and Doing Good Better have probably been the most influential parts of my EA journey, and I probably wouldn’t have been involved in EA without them. Strangers Drowning seemed like a good priming for EA, while Doing Good Better was a pretty compelling intro.
Others, in no particular order:
The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can’t Stand Positive Thinking was really helpful for improving my thought patterns in a more productive and self-compassionate way.
I’ve used the advice in Change of Heart quite a bit and have seen lots of positive results from it.
The Defining Decade changed the way I thought about how to develop my career (although it’s advice is somewhat similar to 80,000 Hours’ talk of “career capital”)
The Renaissance Soul and Quiet were two books that helped me work with certain traits I have that I initially thought were hindering me.
The Ancestor’s Tale got me hooked with trying to understand the world. It was the perfect book for me at the time I read it (2008) because my English wasn’t that good yet and I would plausibly have been too overwhelmed with reading The Selfish Gene right away. And it was just way too cool to have this backwards evolutionary journey to go through. Apart from the next item on this list, I can’t remember another book that I was so eager to read once I saw what it’s about. I really wish I could have that feeling again!
Practical Ethics was life-changing for the obvious reasons and also because it got me far enough into ethics to develop the ambition to solve all the questions Singer left open.
Atonement was maybe the fiction book that influenced me the most. I had to re-read it for an English exam and it got me thinking about typical mind fallacy and how people can perceive/interpret the same situation in very different ways.
Fiction books I read when I was younger must have affected me in various ways, but I can’t point to any specific effect with confidence.
I love this question, and I’m looking forward to reading others’ answers! Thanks for asking it!
The 7 Laws of Magical Thinking: How Irrational Beliefs Keep Us Happy, Healthy, and Sane by Matthew Hutson
I was wrestling with the inescapable thought “I don’t want to live as a hypocrite” before I first read it in 2012. I hadn’t known becoming more rational was a thing other people knew how to do. Somehow the book’s cheerful, mostly forgiving take on how sometimes people are better off irrational gave me the grace I needed to both start seeking ways of mind I could respect in myself, and to appreciate my magical thinking. This book set me up with a growth mindset toward becoming a mind I enjoy.
Biopunk by Marcus Wohlsen
This really stretched my imagination about what a single competent person can do. I picked it up for the biology, and ended up thinking about agency, responsibility, risk, and the archetype of the maverick.
I think I’d have learned this stuff another way if I hadn’t read these books. However, these genuinely contributed to me growing in openness, agency, and self-respect.