Started my 2026 reading log on https://log.hidde.blog/books/#2026
Inspired by @robin I will keep a thread this year to help you find new reads and make it easy to mute.
Started my 2026 reading log on https://log.hidde.blog/books/#2026
Inspired by @robin I will keep a thread this year to help you find new reads and make it easy to mute.

Het is al ochtend als de baanbrekende klimaatmaatregelen van de Green Deal, na eindeloze vergaderingen en maandenlang overleg, worden aangenomen. Als medearchitect van dit ongekend ambitieuze milieupakket is Diederik Samsom daarbij, en hij weet als geen ander: Europa kan de wereld weer op koers brengen, richting een duurzame toekomst.

Scoring systems are everywhere. Underpinning our daily lives – whether it’s the fit bits on our wrists, likes on social media, and even school rankings – they have become pervasive and increasingly dangerous, warping our desires and outsourcing our values to external institutions. Instead of encouraging us to be more playful, to take pleasure in the journey of striving towards a goal, institutions, corporations and bureaucracies weaponize scoring systems to impose their own interests. No matter what, we always seem to be playing by someone else’s rules. In The Score, philosopher C. Thi Nguyen shows us how this newly ‘gamified’ world has fundamentally captured our value systems, turning what might be moral or personal life choices into numerical data, and forcing us to prioritise what can be measured and monetized over what is truly meaningful to us. A life-long lover of online and board games himself, Nguyen argues that we should not stop playing games but rather take a step back and become more aware of their immersive and profound power, so that we might chart a way towards more creative and joyful lives. To start playing our own game.