What book most dramatically changed your perspective of the world?

What book most dramatically changed your perspective of the world?

The Phenomenology of Spirit.

The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle

The Ego and His Own

Though I wouldn't say it "changed" my perspective: it helped me find my own perspective again.

Unironically

nice

the bible

Virtually everything I read impacts my understanding of the world on some level, but it's never quite 'dramatic.' I guess the two works that had the most noticeable influence on my thinking would be Understanding Media by McLuhan and Man and His Symbols by Jung, but it's not like either fundamentally altered my view of the world.

Don Quixote

I hope some of you guys make it to the end of Book 2. It's a wild ride but it pays off.

Écrits by Jacques Lacan

Gödel Escher Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas Hofstadter

A Confession by Tolstoy
On the Death of Rebellion by Kierkegaard
Ecclesiastes by Solomon

the doors of perception

The Ego and Its Own.

Mein Kampf

The Power of Myth by Campbell & Moyers. It kicked off a really healthy spiritual period in my life that lasted through all of my undergrad and really shaped who I was as a young person and thinker.

Of course that was before life just throttled all the passion and joy out of my life but. That's not the book's fault it was just chance. And women.

srry about that

what kind of books do you read now

My diary desu. When I reread it I was shocked

1984.

you understand the world by being in it you goddamn shut-in.

only true sometimes

only true all the times

just finished The Divine Comedy, not really a book but it changed my life permanently, highly recommend

Only true half the times.
Satisfied?

Reading is a way to engage with the world

Define "the world."

I'm sorry about your small dick, user

Probably Sabato's novels and Beckett's drama.

If I had to choose on work of each, I'd say Abaddon el exterminador and Endgame.

This

Yeah, but that's entry-level understanding

Nineteen Eighty Four

That shit changed me. I think it's kind of a gateway book into the great big world of political thought. I heard that some highschool students have to read it for school in some countries. I think they should have to read it everywhere.

I read man and his symbols when i was a kid. That stuff about dying in your dreams really scared me.

For people who havent read it: Jung noticed throughout his career that when people died in their dream and the dream kept going - those people all died for real shortly afterward

creepy af

Islam is Peace
Diversity is Strength
Speech is Hate

The Motley Fool UK Investment Guide

basically set me on the path of getting financially stable

Accidentally walked into it during a school project on Russia and it blew my 16 year old mind. I went from there to Tolstoy/Dostoyevsky and then the Greeks, so I had the fortunate experience of getting to most of the classics before I knew what lit was and got them all memed to death for me.

I read nothing but Stephen King and other similar stuff before it, and hadn't read a book in about a year when I started. So I think it is possible I might have ended up as a bookless normie had it not opened my eyes that there could be more to reading.

Probably the Lord of the Rings. It is what set me down the path to becoming a Christian because I started to read more about Tolkien, his beliefs, and the mythological underpinnings of his work. Because I grew up in an agnostic house that never went to church or talked about religion it wasn't until I read the Silmarillion that I had a sort of epiphany and began to really understand the Christian creation story, and it sparked an interest that just hasn't died. The entire conversion process was very gradual with me starting out studying the classical philosophical arguments for theism and then moving on to more theological texts.

cool user, have you read the other inklings? like charles williams and barfield ?

Probably the bible oddly, but only over time and in conjunction with other reading and lived experience.

>Jung noticed throughout his career that when people died in their dream and the dream kept going - those people all died for real shortly afterward

FUG :-DDDDDDDDDDDDD

The Myth of Sisyphus - Albert Camus

My first dip into the existentialist pool made things feel wonky for a while.

you wouldn't understand

Did you read it in English? If so, which translation?

Ishmael by Daniel Quinn.

Anarcho Primitivism is a shit-tier ideology, and frankly, huge parts of the book are just nonsense. However, it does a good job at depicting humanity from an "outside" perspective, and ultimately, showing that civilization doesn't have to be this way. In contrasting our current lifestyle to that of hunter gatherer societies, it shows some very clear downfalls of civilization as it exists, as well as shining some light on the root causes of these problems.

The Foundation for Exploration by Sean Goonan

Industrial Society and its future-- Uncle Ted
Storm of Steel-- Juenger

Light through an Eastern Window by. Bishop Kallai helped me discover Orthodoxy, despite the author being part of the Oriental Orthodox (he was Indian Orthodox)

Quantum Field Theory by Ryder

>it's possible to not be in the world

Cosmic Trigger by RAW.

>Jung noticed throughout his career that when people died in their dream and the dream kept going - those people all died for real shortly afterward

If only. I've died in my dreams dozens of times without waking up, and I'm still very much alive unfortunately.

sounds like you want to kill yourself, so you're half dead

Aside from CS Lewis I've neglected them for the most part. I did buy Witchcraft a few weeks ago but I never got around to reading it.

I don't want to kill myself, I just want to die in an accident or at the end of a swift and relatively painless illness.

It's ironic because I did so many stupid things when I was younger and survived unscathed, whereas some of my peers succumbed to cancer after leading exemplary lives.

Hume's Enquiry (not fucking Treatise).

Moby Dick

The book of Revelations.

Revelation. There's no "s."

Ah, my bad. I've only read the Finnish one. The word used is such that can't have plural form (think 'water', 'air'), so I always associate it with plural for the reason that there are exceedingly many. Some are not even revealed to the reader aside from their existence.

Demian by Hesse

I forgive you.

If you think so

Montaigne

Meditations by Marcus Aurelius

M O B Y

D I C K

>67. Ill done is that action of doing which one repents later, and the fruit of which one, weeping, reaps with tears.

>68. Well done is that action of doing which one repents not later, and the fruit of which one reaps with delight and happiness.

>325. When a man is sluggish and gluttonous, sleeping and rolling around in bed like a fat domestic pig, that sluggard undergoes rebirth again and again.

>326. Formerly this mind wandered about as it liked, where it wished and according to its pleasure, but now I shall thoroughly master it with wisdom as a mahout controls with his ankus an elephant in rut.

>327. Delight in heedfulness! Guard well your thoughts! Draw yourself out of this bog of evil, even as an elephant draws himself out of the mud.

>218. One who is intent upon the Ineffable (Nibbana), dwells with mind inspired (by supramundane wisdom), and is no more bound by sense pleasures — such a man is called "One Bound Upstream." [18]

Karamazov, I was 16 tough and don't remember shit. I think it's the only classic I have ever read

>16
>don't remember shit
that's great

What would i need to read first before starting this?

expand on this, I have seen it mentioned a lot but never actually heard the opinion of someone who has read it.

Spoopy

Geneaology of moral, especially the section about ascetism, made me reevaluate my entire life and values, which, although I felt as mine, were mostly unexamined.

Mein Kampf

Parmenides

Rational Male by Rollo Tomassi

Hegel's lectures.

>the material world is redeemable

NO

All discussion of asceticism on the internet is necessarily phony.

Discuss.

Dude loops lmao