User Profile

Peter W. Flint

pwflint@books.unquietmind.garden

Joined 8 months, 1 week ago

Landscape designer in the NC Mountains and Piedmont | Proprietor of KALEIOPE Environmental Design | Autodidact Polymath | Certified Meteobierologue | Avid reader | Reluctant SysAdmin

This link opens in a pop-up window

Peter W. Flint's books

Stopped Reading

2025 Reading Goal

86% complete! Peter W. Flint has read 13 of 15 books.

Stephen King: The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower, #1) (2003)

In the first book of this brilliant series, Stephen King introduces readers to one of …

Decennial series re-read. Taking my time with it. Noticing a change in the way I relate to Roland, as less of a role model and more of a peer. I understand his sense of resignation for doing a thing because it needs to be done, and doing it well through habituation and because doing otherwise would mean not doing it at all.

Téa Obreht: The Morningside (Hardcover, 2024, Random House Publishing Group)

There’s the world you can see. And then there’s the one you can’t. Welcome to …

Well-written, lacks thematic development

The story has a good cadence to it until about 2/3 through where it accelerates to getting its themes across at the expense of coherence. It feels like story was pushed toward publication before it was fully developed. Lots of background questions left unanswered. Poor fictional geography. These would have been permissible but too much psychological complexity is introduced towards the end to ignore them. It’s a decent quick read, but unclear what kind of story this is.

György Buzsáki MD  PhD: The Brain from Inside Out (Hardcover, 2019, Oxford University Press)

Pretty convincing argument for inverting the current neuroscience paradigm with implications for mental health treatment and AI development. The current paradigm, “outside-in,” studies the brain from theories of mind developed from behavior and observation prior to effective measurement tools. Buzsaki believes this perspective has outworn its usefulness and suggests reorienting ourselves around what we know about brain systems. That is, by testing specific neural functions and observing the behaviors that arise, rather than observing a behavior and investigating the neural mechanisms behind them. This is in part due to ways in which separate systems within the brain intersect and reinforce each other to produce a vast variety of behaviors all from the same base networks. One example being the 6000+ languages that all arise from the same region of the brain.

The main thesis refutes the tabula rasa paradigm, that the brain is a blank space onto which experience is …

György Buzsáki MD  PhD: The Brain from Inside Out (Hardcover, 2019, Oxford University Press)

Content warning Chapter Summary

commented on The Living Earth Manual of Feng-Shui by Stephen Skinner

Stephen Skinner: The Living Earth Manual of Feng-Shui (Paperback, 1983, Graham Brash (Pte) Ltd) No rating

Content warning Chapter Summaries