(Please boost for wider views)

Of all the books you own, what's the one which a) you have never read, and b) is least likely out of all your books to ever be read, but c) you're unlikely to get rid of?

Mine:
The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind, by Julian Jaynes.

@passenger
My book would be Shadows of the Mind by Roger Penrose. Same theme, consciousness.

It wasn't what I was expecting. Very math-y.

Now might be a good time to take a peek at it again, actually. It's got more relevance than it did 20 years ago. Also, I've experienced some things since then.

You turned it from "unlikely to be read" to "next on my list" as I answered the question.

Honorable mention: A murder mystery written by a customer, who I was talking to as a cashier. I was so happy to meet a published author, I bought his book from him just to show support. Opened it up, religious themes.

@Scoll

Penrose is an astrophysicist and a friend of Hawking so I'm not entirely surprised that his book is hard going - Brief History of Time must be on the all-time list of "books everybody started and nobody finished."

If you do read it, please let us know what you think. I only know Penrose via his scientific writing and presentations, not his long-form prose.

@passenger @Scoll Penrose is an amazing polymath. He appears to have been so annoyed by Douglas Hofstadter's "Gödel, Escher, Bach" that he wrote "The Emperor's New Mind" pulling it to bits, and you've got to love someone who has an argument by *writing books*,

@headfirstonly
I really like the guy. I'm glad he hasn't turned crazy in the times we are living in. The only issue is that I don't understand the math he puts into these books.

I can't bring myself to simply ignore it on the page, that wouldn't be "reading the book" so I put it off until a future date when I understood.

I even bought a calculus textbook to study at home. Never got to start it.

Still, I think I could understand it now.
@passenger

@Scoll @passenger I can't claim to understand even a tenth of his work but Penrose tiling is one of those discoveries that takes my mind to its happy place. Absolutely wild.

@headfirstonly
Wait a minute.. now I remember how Penrose got on my radar as a teen in highschool! PENROSE TILING!

Wow.. I really have been taken away from my home (in math) by the realities of adulthood. Never once has any employer asked me to do math. 😔
@passenger