Friday, December 17, 2021

Three Books

 


A shamelessly-stolen-from-KDT perennial favorite, and it's been a while since I've seen it trotted out.

At the end of The Time Machine (MGM 1960; we shall brook no reference to the atrocious 2002 remake) inventor H. George Wells returns to the distant future, to attempt to rebuild society from scratch amongst the vacuously braindead Eloi (think of a freshmen history class at Berzerkley). He takes with him only three books.

Your turn. "Which three books would you choose?"

Rules: The Dictionary (any dictionary), any multi-volume encyclopedias, and the Bible are off the table. So are any other multi-volume collections of books. You want a one-volume Complete Works Of Shakespeare, and I'll let it slide. Trying to slip in the Durant's Story Of Civilization will not fly.

Any selection violating those few rules will never appear. Otherwise, it's all fair game in Comments.

Bear well in mind that sooner rather than later, this may very well prove to be far more than merely an academic exercise.

47 comments:

  1. Atlasshrugged
    Unintended Consequences
    Principles of Personal Defense

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ray's New Higher Arithmetic
    Sciencia (Walker)
    The Complete Kipling

    ReplyDelete
  3. @Michael,
    In the spirit of Time Enough At Last, both your hard drives crashed.
    You have died of dysentery.

    ReplyDelete
  4. OK, I'll play.

    Beginning with the premise that we're trying to recreate WESTERN Civilization.

    Plato's Republic (because Greek philosophy is the beginning of Western Civilization)

    Aquinas' Summa Theologica (because to understand Western Civilization you have to understand the Judeo-Christian mindset)

    Hobbe's Leviathan (if for no other reason than that it points out the NEED for Civilization, man in his natural state being doomed to live a life that is "solitary, poore, nasty, brutish and short".

    Once given the underpinnings of actual successful civilization, science, engineering, art etc will follow apace.


    Mark D

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  5. The Book of Common Prayer, 1662 edition
    Handley's Principles of Engineering
    Locke's Two Treatises of Government

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  6. 1984 - George Orwell
    Starship Troopers - Robert Heinlein
    The Complete Far Side - Gary Larson

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  7. Unintended Consequences.
    The Three Lives of James Madison.
    Yeats compilation.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Value Engineering: Practical Applications

    Prentice Hall Mathematics: Pre-Algebra; ALL-IN-ONE Student Workbook

    The Constitution of the United States of America: The Declaration of Independence, The Bill of Rights

    There was no mention of books available to Wells in his own time so I went at it as if I were the one doing the rebuilding.

    ReplyDelete
  9. 1960? The Chemical Rubber Handbook, Machinery's Handbook, and the RCA Radiotron Designer's Handbook.
    Write your own poetry.
    .

    ReplyDelete
  10. Atlas Shrugged
    The Federalist Papers
    Machinery's Handbook
    (Not sure if MH is considered an encyclopedia under your terms. If so, substitute Starship Troopers)

    ReplyDelete
  11. 3 Foxfire volumes:
    Volume 5: Making iron and guns, blacksmithing, hunting
    Volume 11: Plant use, preserving, cooking, hunting, fishing
    Volume 1: Vittles, log cabins, crafts, planting by signs

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  12. To be taken into account.....he took books already on his bookshelf at home...
    I need to upgrade my library somewhat...

    ReplyDelete
  13. UP FROM SLAVERY by WASHINGTON
    THE COMPLETE TALES OF UNCLE REMUS by HARRIS
    HANDBOOK OF ENGINEERING FUNDAMENTALS by ESHBACH

    aj

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  14. If we are talking about educating Elohim, The kids book of simple machines, Tom Brown's field guide to wilderness survival and a basic mathematics book.

    For post collapse survival in this society my choices would be different. Although I would still include Tom Brown's field guide I would add Where there is no doctor and basic chemistry.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Storey's Basic Country Skills
    -John Storey

    Gaia's Garden: A guide to homescale permaculture
    -Toby Hemenway

    Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's childhood pal.
    -Christopher Moore

    ReplyDelete
  16. Gray's Anatomy
    Sowell's Basic Economics
    Aquinas' Summa Theologica

    ReplyDelete
  17. Two textbooks:
    Algebra
    Calculus
    Marks Handbook of Mechanical Engineering

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  18. Shakespeare Folio for light reading
    Marks Handbook of Mechanical Engineering for rebuilding
    PDR drugs for fun and profit

    Spin

    ReplyDelete
  19. Chuckling sorry Aesop that knowledge is firmly inside me and my MAG's brains. Field sanitation and water purification is something I teach folks and have DONE in 3rd world countries for over a decade since I retired from Uncle Sam.

    My selection is for those after me IF I fail to teach my replacements.

    ALSO given the 3 previous comments None of them mentioned anything about Field Sanitation nor water purification. So, BAM they be dead from dysentery. Opps....

    Although I must admit I am ORDERING a Copy of Sciencia as soon as I get done with this post. THAT Book looks Interesting.

    ReplyDelete
  20. A high school calculus text, a high school chemistry text, and the 1994 Oxford Classics abridged edition of James George Frazer's "The Golden Bough".

    ReplyDelete
  21. The complete Far Side __G. Larson
    Democracy in America__Tocqueville
    Irish Whiskey;A History Of Distilling, The Spirit Trade, And Excise Controls In Ireland
    by Edward B. McGuire

    ReplyDelete
  22. Niccolo Machiavelli - Sir Isaac Newton - Adam Smith wealth of Nations, and there are others amounting to probably 100 or more that contain all the info you need to rebuild a functioning society. But sine I'm limited to three, I'll choose to stay right here where I am.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Gieck's Engineering Formulas
    The Federalist Papers
    Grey's Anatomy

    ReplyDelete
  24. Lord of the Flies
    Crime and Punishment
    The Stand

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  25. Sun Tzu's The Art of War

    Homer's The Illiad/Odyssey (combined in one book

    Gibbon's The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire (one huge ass book)

    ReplyDelete
  26. Audel's Gardeners and Growers Guide
    Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy.
    FM21-76 Army survival manual

    ReplyDelete
  27. One should be

    The Book: The Ultimate Guide To Rebuilding A Civilization . I am not sure about the other two

    ReplyDelete
  28. So some have already been mentioned, but I'll throw in my choices. None of these may help with dysentery, but for those that don't die from it, these could be important for future generations:
    Atlas Shrugged
    The Art of War
    Tom Sawyer

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  29. 1.) Fieldbook for Canadian Scouting OR Scouting for Boys

    2.) Resistance to Tyranny by Joseph P. Martino

    3.) Animal Farm

    ReplyDelete
  30. The Fountainhead (Anthem by Ayn Rand would work too)
    Physician's Desk Reference
    Mark's Handbook of Mechanical Engineering (if we can't have that, then Robert's Rules of Order)



    ReplyDelete
  31. The Choir Boys-wambaugh...still a good luck at how the cops act and think.

    Lord of the flies

    The republic...Plato

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  32. 1. Euclid's Elements
    2. Aesop's Fables
    3. Newton's Principia

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  33. Where There Is No Doctor
    Where There Is No Dentist
    One of my blacksmithing texts
    Boat Guy

    ReplyDelete
  34. The Feynman Lectures on Physics (Vol 1 if not all 3).
    The Federalist Papers.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica Issac Newton
    Rise and Fall of the Third Reich - William Shirer
    Anything by Patrick O Brian

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  36. The first two are basically separate books:
    1. EIGHT UPANISADS. VOLUME ONE
    2. EIGHT UPANIŞADS. VOLUME TWO
    3. Gudhartha Dipika (one of the very many commentaries on the Gita)

    ReplyDelete
  37. The Old Freedom FighterDecember 18, 2021 at 5:12 AM

    Coup d'Etat: (A practical handbook) on how to overthrow any government, any time, any where, any place. Written by Edward N. Luttwak back in 1968, your comprehensive guide to getting rid of the greatest nemesis ever to man, whether it be capitalism, communism or anything in between. A personal favorite of mind for the past 50+ years!

    By the way, back in early 1961, I had choice of going to see the "Time Machine" or the "The Magnificent Seven" one night. Guess which one I chose? Clue, it begins with one of the best, rousing themes of any flick, ever.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Dirt (and the collapse of civilizations)
    Complete Works of Aristotle
    Desolation Island, by Patrick O'Brien

    ReplyDelete
  39. The Household Cyclopedia (1881)
    Sciencia
    Art of War

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  40. For those with a bigger budget...

    https://zerogov.com/2013/11/13/dfml-library-for-the-end-of-the-world/

    1. Handbook of engineering fundamentals. Wiley.

    2. Some diagnostic manual from about 1970, or earlier, because - no meds, no labs, no imaging.

    3. Someone's farm manual from 1950 or earlier, because - no machines, no sprays, no cultivars.


    or alternatively

    1. Engineering in Emergencies, A practical guide for relief workers.
    2. the Special Forces medical book
    3. Preserving Food without Freezing or Canning: Traditional Techniques Using Salt, Oil, Sugar, Alcohol, Vinegar, Drying, Cold Storage, and Lactic Fermentation

    or if we're scavenging in the ruins

    1. a recent PDR.
    2. How Things Work
    3. Machinery's Handbook

    n

    ReplyDelete
  41. I'm looking at the bookshelf in my office.


    3 ft of engineering and math, including log tables, most pre-1950.
    4 ft of radio and electronics, and electrical
    1 ft of gun, gunsmithing, gun identification
    3 ft machine shop and metal working
    3 ft of construction, wood and electrical, commercial and residential
    2 ft of camping, woodcraft, scouting
    1 ft of sailing, navigation, seamanship
    3 ft of 'handbooks' and pocket guides for various trades
    2 ft of vet and animal husbandry
    2 ft of Foxfire, 1-8 plus wine making

    in the other room,

    12 feet of classics, mostly in single volume collections by author, plus classical works, and US founding docs, and some other history
    6 ft of gardening, orcharding, foraging, basically plants
    3 ft of medical (most of my practical medical is offsite, where I have another 2 ft)
    2 ft of woodworking, cabinet and furniture making
    2 ft of How it's made, how it works, popular science and science history
    3 ft famous plays
    3 ft of cookbooks, most focused on wild game, "church lady" recipe collections, and general purpose books pre-1970s

    and another couple feet of stuff like how sundials work and are made, surveying, knots, climbing, more math and geometry, and plant and animal identification.

    There is also a great deal of contemporary fiction... and offsite another 6 feet of guns, hunting, fishing, and similar.

    That's just the sort of stuff I can remember or see from where I sitting at the moment.

    I like books, and I like older books. I keep trying to get the 1965 Encyclopedia Britannica but keep missing out. I've got a set of one of the others from the early 70s until I finally get the Britannica. I foolishly sold an almost complete set of The Harvard Library on a Shelf, for very little money. I'll be kicking myself for that one for a while.

    I add books pretty much every week, but not always to the apocalypse library.

    n

    ReplyDelete
  42. 1) Machinery's Handbook; any version between 1930 and 1940

    2) The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy

    3) The Prince, by Niccolo Machiavelli
    alternate: The Art of War by Sun Tzu

    The three would tell you how to deal with enemies, the tools to do it, and means of keeping your troops and population alive in combat and afterward. A number of sources have claimed WWII was the first major conflict there fewer troops were lost from disease than from combat.

    The Merck manual is useful mostly for what is *possible*; a pre-WWII general medical book, or one aimed at survival or "third world" medicine, might be more suitable.

    --TRX

    ReplyDelete
  43. "...to attempt to rebuild society from scratch amongst the vacuously braindead Eloi"

    It was crumbling down about them, but the Eloi had some version of a society. They did not have passion, drive, honor, loyalty, or love (fraternal or otherwise). All the calculus and physics, gardening and medical knowledge in the world would make no difference.

    The Glory of the Trenches -- Coningsby Dawson
    Starship Troopers -- Heinlein
    The Screwtape Letters -- CS Lewis

    ReplyDelete
  44. @Anonymous 4:11P,

    Ah, but you're thinking of the Pre-Eloi. Once their Morloch zookeepers were destroyed, the gravy train ended, and they would suddenly be keen to learn everything they needed to fend for themselves.

    "When the pupil is ready, the teacher will appear."

    In this case, cold and hunger, two of the best lesson masters in human history.

    ReplyDelete
  45. @Aesop -- I don't know about pre- or post-, but I dug out the book and realized my suggestions would make as much sense as Quantum Physics to the Eloi of the Upper World. I am now hoping folks come up with some genuinely practical lists for the here-and-now humans ...

    ReplyDelete