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The Best Textbooks on Every Subject

 5 years ago
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For years, my self-education was stupid and wasteful. I learned by consuming blog posts, Wikipedia articles, classic texts, podcast episodes, popular books, video lectures , peer-reviewed papers, Teaching Company courses, and Cliff's Notes. How inefficient!

I've since discovered that textbooks are usually the quickest and best way to learn new material. That's what they are designed to be, after all. Less Wronghas often recommended the "read textbooks!" method. Make progress by accumulation, not random walks .

But textbooks vary widely in quality. I was forced to read some awful textbooks in college. The ones on American history and sociology were memorably bad, in my case. Other textbooks are exciting, accurate, fair, well-paced, and immediately useful.

What if we could compile a list of the best textbooks on every subject? That would be extremely useful.

Let's do it.

There have beenother pages ofrecommended reading on Less Wrong before (and elsewhere ), but this post is unique.Here are the rules :

  1. Post the title of your favorite textbook on a given subject.
  2. You must have read at least two other textbooks on that same subject.
  3. You must briefly name the other books you've read on the subject and explain why you think your chosen textbook is superior to them.

Rules #2 and #3 are to protect against recommending a bad book that only seems impressive because it's the only book you've read on the subject. Once, a popular author on Less Wrong recommended Bertrand Russell's A History of Western Philosophy to me, but when I noted that it was more polemical and inaccurate than the other major histories of philosophy, he admitted he hadn't really done much other reading in the field, and only liked the book because it was exciting.

I'll start the list with three of my own recommendations...

Subject : History of Western Philosophy

Recommendation: The Great Conversation , 6th edition, by Norman Melchert

Reason: The most popular history of western philosophy is Bertrand Russell's A History of Western Philosophy , which is exciting but also polemical and inaccurate . More accurate but dry and dull is Frederick Copelston's 11-volume A History of Philosophy . Anthony Kenny's recent 4-volume history, collected into one book as A New History of Western Philosophy , is both exciting and accurate, but perhaps too long (1000 pages) and technical for a first read on the history of philosophy. Melchert's textbook, The Great Conversation , is accurate but also the easiest to read, and has the clearest explanations of the important positions and debates, though of course it has its weaknesses (it spends too many pages on ancient Greek mythology but barely mentions Gottlob Frege, the father of analytic philosophy and of the philosophy of language). Melchert's history is also the only one to seriously cover the dominant mode of Anglophone philosophy done today: naturalism (what Melchert calls "physical realism"). Be sure to get the 6th edition, which has major improvements over the 5th edition.

Subject : Cognitive Science

Recommendation: Cognitive Science , by Jose Luis Bermudez

Reason: Jose Luis Bermudez's  Cognitive Science: An Introduction to the Science of Mind does an excellent job setting the historical and conceptual context for cognitive science, and draws fairly from all the fields involved in this heavily interdisciplinary science. Bermudez does a good job of making himself invisible, and the explanations here are some of the clearest available. In contrast, Paul Thagard's Mind: Introduction to Cognitive Science skips the context and jumps right into a systematic comparison (by explanatory merit) of the leading theories of mental representation: logic, rules, concepts, analogies, images, and neural networks. The book is only 270 pages long, and is also more idiosyncratic than Bermudez's; for example, Thagard refers to the dominant paradigm in cognitive science as the "computational-representational understanding of mind," which as far as I can tell is used only by him and people drawing from his book. In truth, the term refers to a set of competing theories, for example the computational theory and the representational theory . While not the best place to start, Thagard's book is a decent follow-up to Bermudez's text. Better, though, is Kolak et. al.'s Cognitive Science: An Introduction to Mind and Brain . It contains more information than Bermudez's book, but I prefer Bermudez's flow, organization and content selection. Really, though, both Bermudez and Kolak offer excellent introductions to the field, and Thagard offers a more systematic and narrow investigation that is worth reading after Bermudez and Kolak.

Subject : Introductory Logic for Philosophy

Recommendation: Meaning and Argument by Ernest Lepore

Reason: For years, the standard textbook on logic was Copi's Introduction to Logic , a comprehensive textbook that has chapters on language, definitions, fallacies, deduction, induction, syllogistic logic, symbolic logic, inference, and probability. It spends too much time on methods that are rarely used today, for example Mill's methods of inductive inference. Amazingly, the chapter on probability does not mention Bayes (as of the 11th edition, anyway). Better is the current standard in classrooms: Patrick Hurley's  A Concise Introduction to Logic . It has a table at the front of the book that tells you which sections to read depending on whether you want (1) a traditional logic course, (2) a critical reasoning course, or (3) a course on modern formal logic. The single chapter on induction and probability moves too quickly, but is excellent for its length. Peter Smith's  An Introduction to Formal Logic instead focuses tightly on the usual methods used by today's philosophers: propositional logic and predicate logic. My favorite in this less comprehensive mode, however, is Ernest Lepore's Meaning and Argument , because it (a) is highly efficient, and (b) focuses not so much on the manipulation of symbols in a formal system but on the arguably trickier matter of translating English sentences into symbols in a formal system in the first place.

I would love to read recommendations from experienced readers on the following subjects: physics, chemistry, biology, psychology, sociology, probability theory, economics, statistics, calculus, decision theory, cognitive biases, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, molecular biochemistry, medicine, epistemology, philosophy of science, meta-ethics, and much more.

Please, post your own recommendations! And, follow.

Recommendations so far(that follow; this list updated 02-25-2017):

  • On history of western philosophy , lukeprog Melchert's The Great Conversation  over Russell's A History of Western Philosophy , Copelston's History of Philosophy , and Kenney's A New History of Western Philosophy .
  • On cognitive science , lukeprogBermudez's Cognitive Science  over Thagard's Mind: Introduction to Cognitive Science  and Kolak's Cognitive Science .
  • On introductory logic for philosophy , lukeprogLepore's Meaning and Argument  over Copi's Introduction to Logic , Hurley's A Concise Introduction to Logic , and Smith's An Introduction to Formal Logic .
  • On economics , michaba03mrecommends Mankiw's Macroeconomics over Varian's Intermediate Microeconomics and Katz & Rosen's Macroeconomics .
  • On economics , realitygrillrecommends McAfee's Introduction to Economic Analysis  over Mankiw's Principles of Microeconomics  and Case & Fair's Principles of Macroeconomics .
  • On representation theory , SarahCrecommends Sternberg's Group Theory and Physics  over Lang's Algebra , Weyl's The Theory of Groups and Quantum Mechanics , and Fulton & Harris' Representation Theory: A First Course .
  • On statistics , madhadron recommends Kiefer's  Introduction to Statistical Inference over Hogg & Craig's Introduction to Mathematical Statistics , Casella & Berger's Statistical Inference , and others.
  • On advanced Bayesian statistics , Cyanrecommends Gelman's Bayesian Data Analysis  over Jaynes' Probability Theory: The Logic of Science  and Bernardo's Bayesian Theory .
  • On basic Bayesian statistics , jsalvatierrecommends Skilling & Sivia's Data Analysis: A Bayesian Tutorial  over Gelman's Bayesian Data Analysis , Bolstad's Bayesian Statistics , and Robert's The Bayesian Choice .
  • On real analysis , paper-machinerecommends Bartle's A Modern Theory of Integration  over Rudin's Real and Complex Analysis  and Royden's Real Analysis .
  • On non-relativistic quantum mechanics , wbcurryrecommends Sakurai & Napolitano's Modern Quantum Mechanics  over Messiah's Quantum Mechanics , Cohen-Tannoudji's Quantum Mechanics , and Greiner's Quantum Mechanics: An Introduction .
  • On music theory , komponistorecommends Westergaard's An Introduction to Tonal Theory  over Piston's Harmony , Aldwell and Schachter's Harmony and Voice Leading , and Kotska and Payne's Tonal Harmony .
  • On business , joshkaufmanrecommends Kaufman's The Personal MBA: Master the Art of Business  over Bevelin's Seeking Wisdom  and Munger's Poor Charlie's Alamanack .
  • On machine learning , alexflintrecommends Bishop's  Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning over Russell & Norvig's Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach  and Thrun et. al.'s Probabilistic Robotics .
  • On algorithms , gjmrecommends Cormen et. al.'s Introduction to Algorithms  over Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming  and Sedgwick's Algorithms .
  • On electrodynamics , Alex_Altairrecommends Griffiths' Introduction to Electrodynamics  over Jackson's Electrodynamics  and Feynman's Lectures on Physics .
  • On electrodynamics , madhadron recommends Purcell's Electricity and Magnetism  over Griffith's Introduction to Electrodynamics , Feynman's Lectures on Physics , and others.
  • On systems theory , Davidmanheimrecommends Meadows' Thinking in Systems: A Primer  over Senge's  The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of The Learning Organization and Kim's  Introduction to Systems Thinking .
  • On  self-help , lukeprogrecommends Weiten, Dunn, and Hammer's Psychology Applied to Modern Life  over Santrock's Human Adjustment  and Tucker-Ladd's Psychological Self-Help .
  • On probability theory , SarahCrecommends Feller's An Introduction to Probability Theory  + Vol. 2 over Ross' A First Course in Probability  and Koralov & Sinai's Theory of Probability and Random Processes .
  • On probability theory , madhadronrecommends Grimmett & Stirzaker's Probability and Random Processes  over Feller's Introduction to Probability Theory and Its Applications  and Nelson's  Radically Elementary Probability Theory .
  • On topology , jsteinhardtrecommends Munkres' Topology  over Armstrong's Topology  and Massey's Algebraic Topology .
  • On linguistics , etymologikrecommends O'Grady et al.'s Contemporary Linguistics  over Hayes et al.'s Linguistics: An Introduction to Linguistic Theory  and Carnie's Syntax: A Generative Introduction .
  • On meta-ethics , lukeprogrecommends Miller's An Introduction to Contemporary Metaethics  over Jacobs' The Dimensions of Moral Theory  and Smith's Ethics and the A Priori .
  • On decision-making & biases , badgerrecommends Bazerman & Moore's Judgment in Managerial Decision Making  over Hastie & Dawes' Rational Choice in an Uncertain World , Gilboa's Making Better Decisions , and others.
  • On neuroscience , kjmillerrecommends Bear et al's Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain  over Purves et al's  Neuroscience  and Kandel et al's Principles of Neural Science .
  • On World War II , Peacewiserecommends Weinberg's A World at Arms  over Churchill's The Second World War and Day's The Politics of War .
  • On elliptic curves , magfrumprecommends Koblitz'  Introduction to Elliptic Curves and Modular Forms over Silverman's Arithmetic of Elliptic Curves and Cassel's Lectures on Elliptic Curves .
  • On improvisation , Areporecommends Salinsky & Frances-White's The Improv Handbook over Johnstone's Impro , Johnston's The Improvisation Game , and others.
  • On thermodynamics , madhadron recommends Hatsopoulos & Keenan's Principles of General Thermodynamics over Fermi's Thermodynamics , Sommerfeld's Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics , and others.
  • On statistical mechanics , madhadron recommends Landau & Lifshitz' Statistical Physics, Volume 5 over Sethna's Entropy, Order Parameters, and Complexity and Reichl's A Modern Course in Statistical Physics .
  • On criminal justice , strangerecommends Fuller's Criminal Justice: Mainstream and Crosscurrents  over Neubauer & Fradella's America's Courts and the Criminal Justice System and Albanese' Criminal Justice .
  • On organic chemistry , rhodiumrecommends Clayden et al's Organic Chemistry  over McMurry's Organic Chemistry and Smith's Organic Chemistry .
  • On special relativity , iDanterecommends Taylor & Wheeler's Spacetime Physics  over Harris' Modern Physics , French's Special Relativity , and others.
  • On abstract algebra , Bundle_Gerberecommends Dummit & Foote's Abstract Algebra over Lang's Algebra and others.
  • On decision theory , lukeprogrecommends Peterson's An Introduction to Decision Theory  over Resnik's Choices  and Luce & Raiffa's Games and Decisions .
  • On calculus , orthonormalrecommends Spivak's Calculus  over Thomas' Calculus  and Stewart's Calculus
  • On  analysis in R n , orthonormalrecommends Strichartz's The Way of Analysis  over Rudin's Principles of Mathematical Analysis and Kolmogorov & Fomin's Introduction to Real Analysis .
  • On real analysis and measure theory , orthonormalrecommends Stein & Shakarchi's Measure Theory, Integration, and Hilbert Spaces over Royden's Real Analysis and Rudin's Real and Complex Analysis
  • On partial differential equations , orthonormalrecommends Strauss' Partial Differential Equations over Evans' Partial Differential Equations and Hormander's Analysis of Partial Differential Operators .
  • On introductory real analysis , SatvikBerirecommends Pugh's  Real Mathematical Analysis over Lang's Real and Functional Analysis  and Rudin's Principles of Mathematical Analysis .
  • On commutative algebra , SatvikBerirecommends MacDonald's  Introduction to Commutative Algebra over Lang's Algebra  and Eisenbud's  Commutative Algebra With a View Towards Algebraic Geometry .
  • On animal behavior , Natharecommends Alcock's Animal Behavior, 6th edition  over Dugatkin's  Principles of Animal Behavior and newer editions of the Alcock textbook.
  • On calculus , Epictetusrecommends Courant's  Differential and Integral Calculus over Stewart's Calculus and Kline's Calculus .
  • On linear algebra , Epictetusrecommends Shilov's Linear Algebra  over Lay's Linear Algebra and its Appications and Axler's Linear Algebra Done Right .
  • On numerical methods , Epictetusrecommends Press et al.'s  Numerical Recipes over Bulirsch & Stoer's Introduction to Numerical Analysis , Atkinson's An Introduction to Numerical Analysis , and Hamming's Numerical Methods of Scientists and Engineers .
  • On ordinary differential equations , Epictetusrecommends Arnold's Ordinary Differential Equations over Coddington's An Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations and Enenbaum & Pollard's Ordinary Differential Equations .
  • On abstract algebra , Epictetusrecommends Jacobson's Basic Algebra over Bourbaki's Algebra , Lang's Algebra , and Hungerford's Algebra .
  • On  elementary real analysis , Epictetusrecommends Rudin's Principles of Mathematical Analysis over Ross' Elementary Analysis , Lang's Undergraduate Analysis , and Hardy's A Course of Pure Mathematics .

If there are no recommendations for the subject you want to learn, you can start by checking the Alibris textbooks category for your subject, and sort by 'Top-selling.' But you'll have to do more research than that. Check which textbooks are asked for in the syllabi of classes on your subject at leading universities. Search Google for recommendations and reviews.


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