● New Space Capitalism: The Entrepreneurial Path to the Stars
Rainer Zitelmann
Review via Real Clear Markets
“Space Economics” has only recently become a thing. Economics is the science of scarcity. Where there is scarcity, there is economics. “Scarcity,” in an economic sense, means that a resource satisfies a human want, but there is not enough of it to satisfy all of those potential wants. So we need to figure out a way to allocate ownership and/or usage rights over the resource. Who gets to use it, how much of it, and in what way?
What counts as a “scarce resource,” in an economic sense, changes over time. It depends, among other things, on our technological possibilities. Oil was not a scarce resource until we figured out how to make use of it: it was just a black liquid which nobody wanted, so the question of how we should allocate property rights over oil wells was not especially relevant. Then oil became “black gold,” and all of a sudden, it mattered hugely.
● Market Wizards: The Next Generation: The world’s top young traders reveal how they beat the market
Jack D. Schwager and George F. Coyle
Summary via publisher (Harriman House)
Market Wizards: The Next Generation continues in the three-decade tradition of the hugely popular Market Wizards series, interviewing exceptionally successful traders to learn how they achieved their extraordinary performance results. The twist in this latest instalment is that the featured traders have the youngest average age of any book in the series. Despite their relative youth, these traders have achieved performance records that rank among the very best Market Wizards of all time.
● Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad… and How Great Companies Stay Great
Eric Ries
Interview with author via GeekWire
Eric Ries wants to retire the word “profit,” or at least the way we usually define it.
In his new book, “Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad and How Great Companies Stay Great,” the “Lean Startup” author redefines profit as the maximization of human flourishing. He argues that a lot of what passes for profit in today’s economy is actually a form of corruption.
“We’re supposed to all pretend that we think all the ways of making money are equally good,” Ries told a room of startup founders at Seattle Flow Startup Day in Seattle. “But nobody actually thinks that.”
● The Human Edge: Smarter Decisions in the Age of AI
Cheryl Strauss Einhorn
Summary via publisher (Cornell U. Press)
The Human Edge is a call to action for anyone who wants to lead—and not merely follow—using artificial intelligence (AI) to transform the way we make decisions. But as Cheryl Strauss Einhorn shows, AI can either simplify complex problems or obscure them, expand your thinking or constrain it. With AI becoming more embedded in our work and personal lives, the challenge we face is no longer about using AI—it is about leading AI with clarity, discernment, and a commitment to human agency. This approachable guide for professionals, leaders, and teams who want to make better, more confident choices when using AI systems, offers practical tools to help frame problems and surface solutions, using AI to augment—not replace—your judgment. Urgent, empowering, and grounded in real-world examples, The Human Edge will show you and your organization how to confidently make use of AI’s vast capabilities for smart decision-making by emphasizing the importance of human curiosity, perspectives, values and the courage to define and achieve success.
● The Generational Wealth Code: A Tax-Smart Roadmap to Financial Independence
John J. Vento, et al.
Summary via publisher (Wiley)
In The Generational Wealth Code: A Tax-Smart Roadmap to Financial Independence, four financial professionals, each with a distinct perspective shaped by their own stage of life and area of expertise, provide actionable guidance that helps you and your family create a legacy of wealth, stability, and opportunity. Stagnant wages, crushing student loan debt, rising housing costs, and record levels of consumer debt have made it harder than ever for families to get ahead—this book helps readers become financially independent so that they can make the most informed decisions in all facets of their lives, and thrive at a time when many are simply trying to survive.
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