An Uncommon Curriculum

High RoI Readings on the workings of the world.

Not a syllabus. A way of seeing. Long term reading project.


In no particular order.

 

 

 

 

  • What is Life? by Erwin Schrödinger (TBR)
    A physicist asks what distinguishes living matter from dead matter. And in doing so anticipates the discovery of DNA and plants the seed of molecular biology.

 

 

 

 

  • The Myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus
    The foundational essay of absurdist philosophy: life has no inherent meaning, the universe does not answer, and the only honest response is to live fully anyway — one must imagine Sisyphus happy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • The Median Isn’t the Message by Stephen Jay Gould
    A scientist faces a terminal diagnosis and discovers that knowing how to read a distribution correctly is not just an intellectual skill but a survival one — the best short essay on statistical thinking and the difference between a median and a fate.

 

 

  • Per Second (Information is Beautiful)
    A visual journey through rates and frequencies, from atomic vibrations to geological time that reorients your sense of scale across physics and biology.

 

 

 

  • SDG Tracker by Our World in Data
    A living dashboard of humanity’s progress against the Sustainable Development Goals. The most honest real-time account of what is and isn’t working at planetary scale.

 

 

  • Mathematical Problems by David Hilbert (Paris Lecture 1900)
    The lecture in which a mathematician stood at the edge of the known and named twenty-three unsolved problems — effectively writing the research agenda for an entire century of mathematics. (If for nothing, the introductory section)

 

 

  • Tao Te Ching (Ursula K. Le Guin translation)
    Eighty-one short verses on the nature of things — water, emptiness, the uncarved block — translated by a writer who understood that the Tao resists being stated, only circled.

 

  • Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction by Wallace Stevens
    A long poem that attempts nothing less than a secular replacement for religious belief — beauty and imagination as the only adequate response to a world stripped of gods; difficult, and worth every difficulty.

 

  • Four Quartets by T.S. Eliot
    Four meditations on time, place, memory, and the possibility of redemption — the fullest statement of what poetry can do when it thinks as hard as philosophy and feels harder still.

 

  • Trillion Dollar Baby by Paul Cleary (TBR) (Not available online freely)
    How Norway turned a finite oil endowment into a permanent sovereign wealth fund — and what every other resource-rich nation failed to do; a case study in long-horizon thinking, institutional design, and the rare politics of restraint.

 

  • Laudato Si by Pope Francis (TBR)
    An encyclical that borrows from systems ecology, development economics, and liberation theology to argue that environmental destruction and human inequality are the same crisis — unexpectedly rigorous for a papal document.