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The End of Economic Man

Author: Peter Drucker Published in 1939 , this was Drucker’s first major work. It is not a management book — it is political economy and social philosophy. The core argument: Fascism arose because liberal capitalism failed to provide social meaning and security after World War I. The “economic man” — the Enlightenment idea that humans are primarily rational, self-interested economic actors — collapsed under mass unemployment, inflation, and social humiliation. When economic systems fail to deliver dignity, people seek belonging in authoritarian movements. Central Thesis 1️⃣ Liberal Capitalism Assumed Stability 19th-century thought assumed: Free markets Individual rationality Limited government But this system depended on social cohesion and economic progress. 2️⃣ The Great Depression Broke the System Mass unemployment Middle-class collapse Political paralysis Economic insecurity became existential insecurity. 3️⃣ Totalitarian Movements Filled t...
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Slouching Towards Utopia

  Author: J. Bradford DeLong What the Book Is About (Core Thesis) The book argues that 1870–2010 was humanity’s most transformative economic era — the period when technological progress, industrialization, and organizational innovation dramatically increased global living standards. But: We got the wealth of utopia, not the social stability . Economic growth accelerated — political and social institutions did not keep pace. Central Argument Structure 1️⃣ The Inflection Point: ~1870 Around 1870: Second Industrial Revolution Electricity, internal combustion engine Modern corporations Scientific R&D becomes systematic Productivity growth compounds. 2️⃣ 1870–1945: Chaos and Catastrophe Despite rapid growth: World War I Great Depression World War II Fascism & totalitarianism Technology + mass politics created instability. 3️⃣ 1945–1973: The “Social Democratic Compromise” Post-war institutions stabilized capitalism: Welfare stat...

5 big books to get lost in when you need a break from real life

  5 big books to get lost in when you need a break from real life 1. The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt Donna Tartt’s 'The Goldfinch' opens with an explosion in a New York museum that leaves a young boy, Theo Decker, motherless and unmoored. He steals a small Dutch painting in the chaos, and that single act shapes his life for years. You follow him through grief, privilege, addiction and crime, from Manhattan to Las Vegas and back again. Tartt writes with patience and detail. She studies how trauma lingers and how beauty anchors survival. The novel rewards your focus with moral complexity and emotional force. 2. Pachinko by Min Jin Lee 'Pachinko' traces four generations of a Korean family living in Japan, beginning in the early twentieth century. You watch Sunja, a young woman facing social shame, make a choice that alters her descendants’ futures. The novel moves across decades of discrimination, labour struggles and quiet resilience. Min Jin Lee keeps her prose clear and gr...

30 Jewish Quotes you will Love

  Top 30 Jewish Quotes - Chabad.org From Scripture 1. I have set before you life and death ... and you shall choose life. 1 The  Torah  lays out the principle of  free choice  and urges us to choose well. 2. The L‑rd sees into the heart. 2 G‑d  reminds the Prophet  Samuel  to always look beyond superficialities. 3. The footsteps of humans are directed by  G‑d . 3 King David  assures us that nothing happens by chance. 4. A righteous person falls down seven times and gets up. 4 It is not the fall that counts, but how you respond to it. From the Mishnah 5. If I am not for myself, who is for me? And if I am only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when? 5 The great sage  Hillel ’s psychological tongue-twister teaches us not to rely on others, remain selfless, and seize the moment. 6. Study is not the most important thing, but actions. 6 This holds true in life, as well as with  Torah  and  mitzvahs . 7. Who is wise? Th...

10 Learnings from Warren Buffet

1. Buy businesses, not stocks Think like an owner. Focus on fundamentals, cash flow, and competitive advantage , not short-term price movement. 2. Circle of competence matters Invest only in industries you deeply understand. Saying “no” to most opportunities is a strength, not a weakness. 3. Margin of safety is non-negotiable Purchase below intrinsic value to protect against errors, volatility, or unforeseen risks . 4. Long-term compounding beats trading Time in the market is more powerful than timing the market. Buffett’s wealth is largely the result of decades of disciplined compounding . 5. Quality over cheapness A great business at a fair price is superior to a mediocre business at a bargain price. 6. Management integrity is critical He evaluates leaders on honesty, capital allocation skill, and shareholder alignment , not just growth promises. 7. Avoid debt and complexity Strong balance sheets and simple, understandable models reduce permanent loss of capital. 8....

5 Best Books on Economic History

 Here are 5 highly-regarded books on economic history — spanning broad global perspectives, structural economic change, and long-term growth patterns. These selections are widely recommended by scholars, readers, and economic historians alike: 1. The Age of Capital: 1848-1875 by Eric Hobsbawm A classic synthesis of 19th-century economic and social transformation — industrialisation, finance, and the birth of modern capitalism. Great for understanding how industrial economies emerged and consolidated. 2. The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World by Niall Ferguson A global account of how money, credit, banking, and financial markets shaped human history, from ancient Mesopotamia to the modern era. Insightful for the evolution of financial systems and crises. 3. The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living since the Civil War by Robert J. Gordon A deep dive into U.S. economic performance and living standards over more than a century — useful ...