Currently I am reading Iron Mind by Randall Strossen, a great book that deals with the mental side of lifting. Also, there is a whole lot of carry over into everyday life with the lessons learned.
I going to be finishing up my current book soon and need another one. What would you all recommend?
Wyatt Ward
John Locke, Two Treatises on Government
Noah Baker
Thanks m8, I'll have to look into that.
Easton Roberts
Just finished up Antifragile by Nassim Taleb.
Jaxon Bailey
Oh, well, if you're a counter-revolutionary, then perhaps you won't like Locke. He laid the philosophical groundwork for English and American republicanism. Still, Two Treatises is an explicit refutation of Patriarcha which is on your pic related, so it might still be of interest.
Maybe Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes would be more your thing. He advocates absolute monarchy.
Are you looking for a genre or viewpoint in particular?
Josiah Gray
finished Storm of Steel. Currently reading the Sailor Who Fell From Grace of the Sea by Mishima. it was that or Notes from the Underground
Andrew Hernandez
The Quran
Isaiah Watson
almost done with Meditations by Marcus Aurelius
Ryder Walker
The Diceman is my favourite novel. I finished reading it a second time recently. I highly recommend it to everyone.
Also about to finish "Time and time again" by Ben Elton. It's a good story. Enjoyable. Going to send a copy to my friend who's very into WW1 history, but otherwise I wouldn't say it's a must read.
Parker Torres
Currently reading "The Republic"
Joshua Sanders
Not really, I am pretty wide open to just about anything. Again, I appreciate the response.
Grayson Lee
Extreme ownership
Eli Thompson
read Njal's Saga (make sure it's the Magnusson/Palsson translation), and Why is Your Axe Bloody? by William Ian Miller.
Julian Clark
ride the tiger by evola
Evan Torres
I really like this book, just recently went over the audiobook. Really good leadership advice and interesting war stories
Jeremiah Cruz
Red Platoon
Daniel Flores
Just finished Excession by Iain Banks, now working on The Garden of Priapus by Alfred Jarry. Kind of lost, like when i tried the Satyricon.
Josiah Jenkins
The Turner Diaries
Wyatt Ross
Reading Gai-jin by Clavell at the moment. I really love the way he writes, Shogun is my all time favorite, Tai Pan was pretty gud too.
I was justa a bitch ass kid when i read Rat King, like 13 I think, i should reread as I feel like I might have been a bit too young to really appreciate it, though I recall loving it.
The whole Asia saga makes me realize what a disgusting fucking pile of shit modern japan is compared to what it used, Hate weaboos and anime with a passion.
Anthony Mitchell
Friend of mine was reading that recently and said that it consisted largely of rather obvious observations, and that the book seemed to fulfill the function of establishing Taleb as the guy who coined/popularised the term "antifragility"
Daniel Evans
>Sailor Who Fell From Grace of the Sea >Notes from the Underground
Joseph Clark
What did you think of the second Dice Man novel?
Christian Perez
Tibetan book of living and Dying and Augustus by John Williams
Jackson Martin
The Power of Yoga by Julius Evola
Matthew Martin
...
Ryder Richardson
How was the Tibetan book of living and dying? Did it go down easily?
Also, when do we get out /fitlit/ board back?
Camden Perez
physical well being is done through healthy food and walking. beyond this shows that you either do it because -you are bored, aka a failure -you are a homo, aka a failure -you do it for women, aka a man devoted to please women even if you claim otherwise, like all men, aka a failure -you cling to your health, aka a failure living in fear of death
=>you are a pleb as soon as you lift. which is confirmed by all the beta males posting pictures of women.
Nathan Williams
>this post tell that to the greeks you fucking pleb
Wyatt Parker
>bring back the fops this is a dandy board, you tights wearing pansy
Elijah Watson
socrates would like to have a word with you
Carter Rivera
I lift for the same reason that I read.
Nolan Clark
Bruce Springsteen's autobiography Born To Run
Also reading Atlas Obscura
Thomas Baker
This is why you start with the Greeks
Brayden Butler
where do the greeks speak of lifting? i've read several of plato's dialogues and from what i've gleaned socrates encourages good physical health but always maintains that it should be subordinate to the intellect, that a life of the mind is most virtuous.
Oliver Bailey
Get a load of this homo.
Carson Parker
>he didn't start with the greeks laughinggirls.jpg
Christian Barnes
that dude looks like such a wigger if he was around today u kno he'd like rock a raider cap and i donno maybe a xxxl kappa track jacket and some massively baggy tru religion jeans or sth, with a riced out asian car of some sort
Lincoln Jackson
>cannot unsee now...
Jaxon Peterson
That's basically who he was. He got stabbed to death while taking a piss.
Leo Stewart
Atlas shrugged- ayn rand
Brody James
I work on a few concurrently: The Pike by Lacy Hughes-Hallet Beyond good and evil by friedrich Ride the tiger by julius evola And then a smattering of pua literature
Robert Hill
Lifting takes about an hour and a half for a good routine with assets, a sprinkle of cardio at the, end and a shower after, three times a week. That's 4.5 hours out of 168 hours a week. We take an average of 6-8 hours of sleep a night, that's about 120 hours of your week not spent sleeping. That's roughly 3% of you hours awake per week you would spend "at the gym." 3% is going to be subordinate to almost anything else you do with your time. There's no excuse faggot.
Alexander Sanchez
Nearly finished Zola's 'Thérèse Raquin' I like the plot but the translation is a bit shoddy imo.
Oliver Foster
I notice there's not a single citation from Greek philosophy in this post. That 3% of your week could be spent in a variety of other ways that would also encourage good health. Where is the actual Greek-lifting connection?
Jayden King
He's talking about this oftcited image
But he is right, you have no excuse
Adam Collins
“No man has the right to be an amateur in the matter of physical training. It is a shame for a man to grow old without seeing the beauty and strength of which his body is capable.”
― Socrates
Josiah Foster
In which dialogue does Socrates actually say that? And even so, why must "physical training" equate to lifting?
Btw I do lift, but when I'm in need of an intellectual justification for the habit I turn to Mishima, whose Sun & Steel explicitly defends lifting.
David Morgan
This is /fitlit/, we don't allow people who were successfully stereotyped and lampooned in a buzzfeed video
Levi Mitchell
Why the fuck do you need to defend lifting? Can you not partake in an enjoyable activity without someone smarter than you saying that it's okay? Do you need to have some essays memorized to argue in favor of anything you want to do before you can do it? How much of a pleb are you?
William Clark
I don't, actually, but apparently you (or at least several other anons itt) do, hence the constant deferment to 'the Greeks' who may well have never even discussed lifting.
Isaac Butler
>"but when I'm in need of an intellectual justification for the habit" >the fuck do you need justification for >"I don't, actually"
Bro, read what you type. Saying you need intellectual justification for habits that exclusively net benefits is fucking retarded. It's like you're saying you need to read a few books arguing in defense of brushing your teeth before you could bother doing so because you're just such a mental giant. You're coming across as a middle school student who thinks he's a lot smarter than he is.
Mason Hernandez
Not that guy, but if that's what your friend said, then he's a serious fool and doesn't understand the book, or at least its extreme import. It's "obvious" because it makes so much sense.
Jace Parker
Oh please lad, I was being cheeky >WHEN I'm in need
Jonathan Garcia
>"when I need someone to kick me in the balls, I ask my friend Jerry to do it" >why the fuck would you NEED someone to kick you in the balls? >"I don't though" >you just said you did >"yeah but I said 'when' so it's not like all the time"
the fuck are you doing
Camden Gonzalez
I emphasized 'when' to indicate the cheeky rhetoric at play, but for you to take such a comment about my friend Jerry at face value, it's quite evident your reading comprehension is piss-poor.
Bentley Hill
>Did you interpret what I wrote to mean what was written? Couldn't you read the intricacies that weren't actually there? Yeah, I know, you were just pretending to be retarded for fun, okay
Dylan Price
>When I'm in charge it'll be a crime punishable by death to comment on the Greeks without having read them >"Um what? You'll never be in charge. Nobody would elect you and you couldn't pull off a coup" >Well yes, obviously but the point- >"What so you mean 'obviously?' You JUST said you'd be in charge, and now you're saying you won't be?"
This entire discussion branched from one in which people were deferring to the Greeks to defend lifting. I questioned the connection between the two, and posited a separate thinker who would better fulfill that role. Then you jump in with 'hurr, you shouldn't have to defer to anyone to defend lifting,' which leaves me to conclude that you either didn't read the full conversation, or you simply don't comprehend context.
Jackson Clark
Who here /1000lbclub/?
Favorite book?
1110lb total, Moby Dick reporting in.
Austin Baker
Haven't read it yet. I really think I might soon but it just bothers me that from what I've read about it, Romesha doesn't really mention what the other soldiers did in that battle. He wasn't the only one from that battle to be awarded the MoH.
Adam Morales
>read every day on the commute the work >currently reading Dead Souls by Gogol
>do push ups, sit ups, and pull ups nearly every day >feels fucking awesome
Nathan Russell
Just finished Lolita today and started To The Lighthouse. I liked Lolita, but I have a slight grudge against Nabokov for making me sympathize with a pedophile. So far Woolf is good, I like her method of stream of consciousness and the prose is beautiful.