One of my guilty pleasures is reading.
I find myself constantly challenging my own perspective by seeking out new ideas, different approaches, and contrary opinions.
At least that is what I tell myself as I skim through vast quantities of blog posts, media articles, and academic journals on topics like economics, personal finance, science, technology, and history.
Many bloggers maintain a static blog roll of their favourite writers. The approach I prefer is to present a running log of well written or interesting content I have recently consumed and thought worth sharing.
Interested readers can join me on my quest for knowledge, learning from content I have recently enjoyed. It appears that many of you share this guilty pleasure, as this page of curated content has become the most popular part of { in·deed·a·bly }.
Enjoy!
Articles · Books
Articles
- The Sweet Spot Principle
- Ways to think about AGI
- ‘I am moving – that is it’: tycoon speaks out about the end of non-dom tax status
- Whose Tax is it Anyway?
- A Few Short Stories
- How I Think About Debt
- The Fallacy of Passion
- Ontology: Finding meaning in data (Palantir RFx Blog Series, #1)
- Risk Seeking vs. Mitigating
- Other people’s problems
- Looking for AI use-cases
- Global Withdrawal Rates – Portfolio Charts
- Gemini 1.5 and Google’s Nature
- Where You Should Put Your Money (And When)
- Storybrand One Liner Exercise | Donald Miller | EntreLeadership Takeaways
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- How to negotiate a big payrise
- Lucky vs. Repeatable
Books
Personal finance only contains a half dozen or so key concepts.
This collection of books probably weren’t the first to express an idea, and may not be the best articulation of a concept, but each contributed a valuable lesson relevant to where I was on my own personal finance journey at the time that I read them.