

LessWrong (30+ Karma)
LessWrong
Audio narrations of LessWrong posts.
Top mentioned books
Here are the most frequently recommended books on the LessWrong (30+ Karma) podcast:
#1 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Meta-analysis of the relationship between risk perception and health behavior
The example of vaccination

#2 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The letters of J.R.R. Tolkien
a selection
#3 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The escalation of commitment to a course of Action
No subtitle available.

#4 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Mastering the Core Teachings of the Buddha
An Unusually Hardcore Dharma Book

#5 Mentioned in 1 episodes
If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies

#6 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Baroque Cycle
#7 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Scope insensitivity in contingent valuation of complex environmental amenities
No subtitle available.
#8 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Neural Mechanisms Mediating Optimism Bias
No subtitle available.
#9 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Escalation of Commitment to a Failing Course of Action
Toward Theoretical Progress

#10 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Paradise Lost

#11 Mentioned in 1 episodes
On the edge
The Gamblers

#12 Mentioned in 1 episodes
The Real Anthony Fauci
Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health
#13 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Exposure and effect
Over and meta-analysis of research 1968 to 1987

#14 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Supervised Machine Learning for Science
How to stop worrying and love your black box
#15 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Illusion of Control. A Meta-Analytic Review
No subtitle available.

#16 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Obsolete
Power, Profit, and the Race for Machine Superintelligence
#17 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Music, pandas and Muggers On the Effective Psychology of Value
No subtitle available.
#18 Mentioned in 1 episodes
A cross-cultural study on escalation of commitment behaviour in software projects
No subtitle available.
#19 Mentioned in 1 episodes
World on Fire
How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability
#20 Mentioned in 1 episodes
Perceived Control and the Optimistic Bias
A Meta-Analytic Review