25 books in 2025 was my goal for #bookstr. I had a fully planned and oversubscribed list coming into the new year but something in the aether told me to put this one to the top and all I can say is it was the best decision. Critical Path was Buckminster Fuller’s magnum opus, written when he was 85, it’s seemingly the writings of a time-travelling Bitcoiner and the most important thing I’ve read in more than a decade. A compilation of his ideas and concepts spanning 50 years of work, his completely unique philosophy, an optimism our world today sorely lacks, and a full outline of his view for progressing humanity by doing more with less based on material science. @Gigi recently mentioned we were promised flying cars and I noted millenials and younger weren’t promised shit. Well Fuller in his day promised much more, designed it, prototyped it, built what he could and told fantastic tales which could align people to progress along his futuristic way - we need Buckminster Fuller in 2025! A few Bitcoiners have posted clips of him discussing energy and a single global accounting system (see images) going back to 1967 but I’ve not seen any review this book. It’s simply phenomenal. I can’t attest to the veracity of all of it, I will have to dig some rabbitholes and definitely re-read it again in a year but if even 30% holds up then every Bitcoiner ought read it for that alone. Fuller articulates a worldview where humanity stops fucking around, stops letting parasites control things, focusses on sharing the most important information to build the best technologies to do more with less and raise QoL standards for all. @ODELL managed to meme Mandibles to the fore for Bitcoiners - if ever there was a book all Bitcoiners should read; THIS IS IT. You won’t agree with all of it, the terminology may be a bit dated, but you will be interested throughout and amazed at his foresight 45 years ago, and hopefully motivated as I am that you too can just do things like Bucky the OG did and the world can change for the better.

Replies (40)

Looks like a very intersting book Maybe even better than a bitcoin podcast
StackSats.IO's avatar StackSats.IO
25 books in 2025 was my goal for #bookstr. I had a fully planned and oversubscribed list coming into the new year but something in the aether told me to put this one to the top and all I can say is it was the best decision. Critical Path was Buckminster Fuller’s magnum opus, written when he was 85, it’s seemingly the writings of a time-travelling Bitcoiner and the most important thing I’ve read in more than a decade. A compilation of his ideas and concepts spanning 50 years of work, his completely unique philosophy, an optimism our world today sorely lacks, and a full outline of his view for progressing humanity by doing more with less based on material science. @Gigi recently mentioned we were promised flying cars and I noted millenials and younger weren’t promised shit. Well Fuller in his day promised much more, designed it, prototyped it, built what he could and told fantastic tales which could align people to progress along his futuristic way - we need Buckminster Fuller in 2025! A few Bitcoiners have posted clips of him discussing energy and a single global accounting system (see images) going back to 1967 but I’ve not seen any review this book. It’s simply phenomenal. I can’t attest to the veracity of all of it, I will have to dig some rabbitholes and definitely re-read it again in a year but if even 30% holds up then every Bitcoiner ought read it for that alone. Fuller articulates a worldview where humanity stops fucking around, stops letting parasites control things, focusses on sharing the most important information to build the best technologies to do more with less and raise QoL standards for all. @ODELL managed to meme Mandibles to the fore for Bitcoiners - if ever there was a book all Bitcoiners should read; THIS IS IT. You won’t agree with all of it, the terminology may be a bit dated, but you will be interested throughout and amazed at his foresight 45 years ago, and hopefully motivated as I am that you too can just do things like Bucky the OG did and the world can change for the better.
View quoted note →
If this book came on to your radar, there is a reason. I don’t know what that is, it’s a strange book, but there’s something in there for you that you should be reading and the universe is telling you.
I've always had a weird aversion to buckminster fuller. Probably because the only thing I knew about him was Epcot center, and I'm like "that's neat, but not exactly genius level...meh" lol. I found it searching previous convos we've had on Damus earlier. Seems you read a lot, so putting rec very high in queue. Let you know if I read it, and what I think if I do
Free on audible! Another sign 👀 Got this and Eveeything and More by David Foster Wallace loaded up now (forget who recommended that one to me now 🥲)
Opening "epigraph", whatever that means, has me thinking it might be a tough read lol Will give it more time of course, but wtf is this:
Just had app crash after I wrote something here...sigh. Just reiterating what a surprisingly good read this is so far. One bit of trivia that blows my mind is that the flag George Washington waved was that of the east India company flag, before he quickly rebranded to remove British imagery! The 13 stripes being for the colonies is a lie image
Yep I remember doing a double-take at that too, had no idea. Then a few pages later he discusses the shift to metal money and it’s a framing I can’t recall hearing but I really want to know if it’s true. image
Yeah, I'm just going with it for now without "verifying" or questioning too much. Seems he's onto something rhough. Have heard say that British controlled early America despite us appearing to oust them in rev war.
According to Gemini: The inclusion of the foreign ensign is primarily a legacy of the strong relationship forged between King Kamehameha I, the unifier of the Hawaiian Islands, and British Captain George Vancouver in the late 18th century
Please do! The more interesting one is in thread above, where I learned early US flag, that which Washington would have waved early on, was East India Company. He apparently scrambled to correct this with Betsy Ross quickly, but the stripes remained and never had anything to do with 13 colonies.
WonkyDonky's avatar
WonkyDonky 7 months ago
this is one of the stain glass sheets of Selby Abbey in North Yorkshire, England, this church is the ancestral church of the Washington lineage. image
Coincidence?? Also learned that Wessington may have been original form of last name, as John Wessington/Washington was who it was commemorating.
WonkyDonky's avatar
WonkyDonky 7 months ago
It’s a beautiful part of the country, come stay in York, and drive down to Selby Abbey in 30mins to see it and talk to the people there. 😊
WonkyDonky's avatar
WonkyDonky 7 months ago
With all the grandiose cathedrals I have visited, this is the one I feel comfortable in. It is beautiful and unworldly.
It's quite beautiful. They really don't build them like they used to. Added to list of places to check out if I ever am in the neighborhood... not likely anytime soon though.
Must. Stop. Wasting. Time... I learned US acknowledged in 1993 in something known as Apology Resolution that, "acknowledges that the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii occurred with the active participation of agents and citizens of the United States and further acknowledges that the Native Hawaiian people never directly relinquished to the United States their claims to their inherent sovereignty as a people over their national lands" Translation, yeah we stole it, sorry 🤷‍♀️ That's enough history for one day 😮‍💨
Oh yeah, I also learned that "mullet" in coat of arms days means a star with a hole in it. Useful stuff! Greenland flag is red and white... could use a dash of blue in there