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Carl Sagan’s Reading List
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Indeed, other than the first one, i'm not sure i've really heard of the others. The first was popular a few years back, if i recall correctly. I think it was part of the info on Tulipmania books.Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age;Tulipmania; Tulipmania: The Skagit Valley Tulip Festival: Official Festival Guidebook.

I own and read part of this one. It's a popular Wall Street book to recommend. Good lessons to remember when people start to think prices can only go up.
It seems Sagan at least created the list in 1954. I don't know if he read the books that year.
As to why it was released - It's from a website that I follow on FB
http://www.brainpickings.org
Books mentioned in this topic
Tulipmania: The Skagit Valley Tulip Festival : official festival guidebook (other topics)Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age (other topics)
Tulipmania (other topics)
But We Were Born Free: (other topics)
The Republic (other topics)
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Carl Sagan’s Reading List
by Maria Popova
Reverse-engineering one of the greatest minds of all time by his information diet.
“Success,” concluded this 1942 anatomy of inspiration, “depends on sufficient knowledge of the special subject, and a variety of extraneous knowledge to produce new and original combinations of ideas.” Few are the heroes of modern history more “successful” and inspired than the great Carl Sagan, and his 1954 reading list, part of his papers recently acquired by the Library of Congress, speaks to precisely this blend of wide-angle, cross-disciplinary curiosity and focused, in-field expertise — and is balanced with a healthy approach to reading and “non-reading”, with some books read “in whole” and others “in part.” (Sagan, as we know, was an avid advocate of books.)
Extraordinary Popular Delusions (public library; public domain) by Charles Mackay
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds
The Uses of the Past: Profiles of Former Societies (public library) by Herbert Joseph Muller
The Uses of the Past
The Immoralist (public library) by André Gide
The Immoralist
Education for Freedom (public library) by Robert Maynard Hutchins (Chapter One: “The Autobiography of an Uneducated Man”)
Education for Freedom
Young Archimedes and Other Stories (public library) by Aldous Huxley
Young Archimedes and Other Stories
Timaeus (public library; public domain) by Plato
Timaeus/Critias
Who Speaks for Man? (public library) by Norman Cousins
Who Speaks for Man
The Republic (public library; public domain) by Plato
The Republic
The History of Western Philosophy (public library) by W. T. Jones
A History of Western Philosophy, Volume 1: The Classical Mind
But We Were Born Free (public library) by Elmer Holmes Davis
But We Were Born Free