How the World Really Works cover

How the World Really Works

Vaclav Smil

"How the World Really Works" is a data-driven reality check on the physical foundations of our modern civilization, written by Vaclav Smil. Smil, a renowned energy scientist and Bill Gates’ favorite author, aims to cure the "magical thinking" that dominates current debates about climate change and the green energy transition. Smil argues that before we can fix the world, we must understand the material realities that sustain it. He identifies the "Four Pillars" of modern life: Ammonia (for fertilizer/food), Steel, Concrete, and Plastics. He demonstrates that our dependence on the fossil fuels required to produce these materials is far deeper than most realize. The book is not a denial of climate change, but a denial of utopian timelines. Smil explains why total decarbonization by 2050 is physically impossible without causing societal collapse. By analyzing everything from globalization to risk assessment, How the World Really Works offers a scientifically grounded, agnostic guide to understanding the massive inertia of our energy systems, arguing that we must balance high ideals with hard numbers.

Being You cover

Being You

Anil Seth

"Being You" is a radical new theory of consciousness proposed by Anil Seth, one of the world's leading neuroscientists. Seth challenges the intuitive belief that our brains work like video cameras, passively recording the world around us. Instead, he argues that the brain is a "prediction machine" and that our entire reality is a "controlled hallucination." Seth posits that we do not perceive the world as it is, but as our brain expects it to be. Our sensory organs merely provide error correction for the brain's internal best guesses. When these hallucinations agree with reality, we call it perception; when they don't, we call it hallucination. Central to his theory is the concept of the "Beast Machine." Seth argues that consciousness is not software running on a computer-like brain, but a biological phenomenon deeply rooted in the body's drive to stay alive. Our experiences of "self"—and emotions—are fundamentally linked to interoception (sensing the internal state of the body). Being You offers a biological basis for human experience, suggesting that we are conscious not in spite of our animal nature, but precisely because of it.

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