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A**H
Master Class
Gripping from the very first page and gets the reader hooked with his inimitable style. The subject is very relevant to our times and in the dexterous hands of historian Harari it enlightens and illuminates the paths of knowledge for any avid reader. The book is a good investment of our time and the payback is instant.
R**K
Why more information does not mean more truth or fact
It is an excellent history of Human development in terms of information and how it evolved. Every new technology came with its own upside and downside and based on the type of government-democracy, autocracy, dictatorship, totalitarian etc. How each of them used information as a tool to bring about order or total submission. How more information does not automatically lead to truth or facts. And finally how AI can transform the entire landscape and how the human species may not be able to stand an AI onslaught and how AI is different from all the earlier information technology tools and inventions. Examples and illustrations from history are very well selected and told in a very interesting way. The author is a gripping story teller and brings to life historical events in a very relevant manner. I wish he could have gone a little more into various ways to control and use AI for the betterment of mankind, even though it is not his subject matter.
V**A
Nexus by Yuval Noah Harari
The book by Yuval Noah Harare . In general his previous book like sapiens, 21 lessons to 2- century are too good . Induce to read continuously. This book is good but in this subject AI more books are in market . Gives more specific input on AI . Readable since my scale on the author is 80% and above . This is~ 70-75 %
R**A
Excellent and Insightful Book
“Nexus” by Yuval Noah Harari is a superb book, and it is the first book of his that I have thoroughly enjoyed. In a world where algorithms play an outsized role in influencing our communication, thoughts, moods, and opinions, this book offers a timely history of communication networks and how they have grown and influenced human thought.Yuval divided his book into ‘human networks,’ ‘the inorganic network,’ and ‘computer politics.’ He makes a crucial point that many authors miss when they write about the importance of the Gutenberg press in spreading ideas. Tools like the Gutenberg press enable information networks, and people use or misuse these tools to create and build information networks.Throughout the book, Yuval emphasizes that information is not knowledge or wisdom, which we forget in our so-called ‘information age.’The first section ends with a brief chapter on democracy and totalitarianism. In an ideal situation, democracy contains self-correcting mechanisms. However, Yuval did not analyze how democracies are often failing today. The author distinguishes between authoritarianism and totalitarianism, creating the perfect platform for launching the next section, ‘The Inorganic Network.’The second section comprises three chapters: distinguishing between computers and the printing press, emphasizing how the network is always on, always hungry for data, and how it is often wrong. The networked world we live in today is always wide awake, roving the world with open eyes. However, since they use past behavior to make predictions and rely on data, these networks often make more errors than we realize. However, these errors are costly, as Yuval explains in the book.Yuval dedicates the last section to computer politics and how these networks play out in the democratic and totalitarian worlds. In my opinion, he is too optimistic about democratic societies. While democracies ought to have self-correcting mechanisms, recent crackdowns on pro-Palestinian supporters do not augur well for democracies. Yuval makes a critical point: voting mechanisms do not create democracies. The inorganic networks play different roles in totalitarian regimes. Yuval raises essential points about democracies and the continued failure to hold conversations.Ultimately, will the world get divided into those who control information networks, those who use them, or those who allow the information networks to use them?This book is excellent, his best to date, and will give you much food for thought.
N**J
A must read.
Very strong reasoning, gets you better prepared to participate in conversation over AI. Feels like running out of time pretty fast.
A**R
Very nice Read
Good read, as always brings in a different perspective
R**N
Unexpected in a negative way (Quality of the book)
Well i should start saying that the books of Yuval Noah Harari are just mind-blowingly filled with knowledge. I had previously purchased Sapiens the quality and text was on point but this book has many words faded and the cover is not good.
S**R
A book equally great for technical and non-technical person
I can bet no one can imagine the possible scenarios in which AI can be proved as a curse or boom.The author seems to genuinely spend enough time understanding this domain.
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