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The Importance of Reading in the Workplace
The French Revolution changed the course of Napoleon's life. He showed political ruthlessness immediately, and used it to win battles over next few years. In his writings he wrote ambition like all disordered passions is a violent and unthinking delirium that only burns out after having consumed everything in its path.
What I learned from reading Napoleon: A Concise Biography by David Bell.
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[3:00] He could think quicker and along more individual and original lines than any of them.
[4:00] John D: The Founding Father of the Rockefellers by David Freeman Hawke. (Founders #254)
[4:14] Miami meetup with Shane Parrish
[7:31] His life was enormously important, endlessly fascinating, and connected to some of the most controversial and constantly reinterpreted events in the world history.
[8:37] Paul Johnson’s books:
Churchill by Paul Johnson. (Founders #225)
Mozart: A Life by Paul Johnson. (Founders #240)
Socrates: A Man for Our Times by Paul Johnson. (Founders #252)
[10:54] Heroes: From Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar to Churchill and de Gaulle by Paul Johnson. (Founders #226)
[12:20] He knew the importance of actively crafting his image in all available media.
[15:08] Napoleon found comfort and companionship in books
[17:02] The revolution was overturning age old hierarchies and giving worldwide prominence to previously obscure figures.
[17:24] Napoleon was ruthless.
[18:36] Only after that battle did I believe myself to be a superior man. And did the ambition come to me of executing the great things, which so far had been occupying my thoughts only as a fantastic dream.
[20:00] Many are the historical opportunities that have been lost for lack of talent or vision. In Napoleon's case, the man met his hour.
[20:13] He could see in a moment how to maneuver everything for maximum effect.
[21:03] Napoleon was a man of stone and iron.
[26:27] Napoleon was something new and the keenest observers understood it.
[29:06] I wanted to rule the world, who wouldn't have in my place?
[29:26] If papa could see us now.
[29:45] Franklin & Washington: The Founding Partnership by Edward Larson. (Founders #251)
[32:15] You might as well send a cow in pursuit of a rabbit. The Indians were accustomed to these woods.
[35:30] The Empire was increasingly coming to resemble a skyscraper built in haste without a proper foundation.
[35:58] Driven: An Autobiography by Larry Miller. (Founders #168)
[39:24] The key to victory was to plan and pursue a war exactly contrary to what the enemy wants.
[39:49] Hardcore History Ghosts of the Ostfront series
[41:08] The distracted do not beat the focused.
[42:36] Success is never permanent. The same person that built the empire, destroyed it.
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