2020.2.21 ~2020.12.31. 총 39권.
1.
Nichlas Epley. 2014. Mindwise: Why we misunderstand what otheres think, believe, feel, and want. Vintage. 188 pages.
2.
Matt Ridley. 2015. The Evolution of Everything: how new ideas emerge. 320pages.
3.
Matt Ridley. 2020. How Innovation works: and why it flourishes in freedom. Harper Collins. 373 pages.
4.
Malcolm Gladwell. 2019. Talking to Strangers: What we should know about the people we don't know. Little Brown. 346 pages
5.
Warren Bennis and Patricia Ward Biederman. 1997. Organizing Genius: The Secrets of creative collaboration. Basic Books. 218 pages.
6.
Hohn H. Lienhard. 2006. How Invention begins: Echoes of old voices in the rise of new machines. Oxford University Press. 242 pages.
7.
Walter Isaacson. 2014. The Innovators: how a group of hackers, geniuses, and geeks created the digital revolution. Simon & Schuster. 488 pages.
8.
Reed Hastings and Erin Meyer. 2020. No rules rules: Netflix and the culture of reinvention. Pneguin Press. 272 pages.
9.
James C, Scott. 2020(1998). Seeing Like a State: How certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed. Yale University Press. 357 pages.
10.
Deirdre McCloskey. 2010. Bourgeois Dignity: Why Economics can't explain the modern world. University of Chicago Press. 450 pages.
11.
Claude S. Fischer. 2014. Lurching toward happiness in America. MIT Press. 129 pages.
12.
Robert B. Marks. 2015. The Origins of the Modern World: A Global and environtal narrative from the fifteenth To the twenty first century. 3rd ed. Roman & Littlefiels. 218 pages.
13.
Walter Scheidel. 2019. Escape from Rome: The Failure of Empire and the Road to Prosperity. Princeton University Press. 527 pages.
14.
Douglas C. North, John Joseph Wallis, and Barry R. Weingast. 2009(2013). Violence and Social Orders: A Conceptual Framework for Interpreting Recorded Human History. Cambridge University Press. 282.
15.
김봉중. 2006. 카우보이들의 외교사. 푸른역사. 447쪽.
16.
Henry Kissinger. 2014. World Order. Penguin books. 374 pages.
17.
Paul Kennedy. 1987. The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers. Vintage. 540 pages.
18.
Jeffry A. Frieden. 2006. Global Capitalism: Its fall and rise in the twentieth century. W.W. Norton. 476 pages.
19.
Claudia Goldin and Lawrence F. Katz. 2008. The Race between Education and Technology. Harvard University Press. 353 pages.
20.
David P.Barash. 2003. The Survival Game: How game theory explains the biology of cooperation and competition. Henry Holt & Co. 277 pages.
21.
Michael Marmot. 2015. The Health Gap: the challenge of an unequal world. Bloomsbury Publishing. 346 pqges.
22.
Paul Seabright. 2010. The Company of Strangers: a natural history of economic life. Princeton University Press. 2010. 315 pages.
23.
Nicholar Christakis and James Fowler. 2009. Connected: How your friend's friends' friends affect everything you feel, think, and do. Little Brown. 305 pages.
24.
Brad Stone. 2013. The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon. Back Bay Books.
25.
Paul Collier. 2007. The Bottom Billion: Why the poorest countries are failing and what can be done about it. Oxford University Press. 195 page.
26.
박홍규, 박지원. 2019. 내내 읽다가 늙었습니다: 무리짓지 않는 삶의 아름다움. 사이드웨이. 461쪽.
27.
Gerd Gigerenzer. 2014. Risk Savvy: how to make good decisions. Penguin Books. 261 pages.
28.
Steven Johnson. 2014. How We got to now: six innovations that made the modern world. Riverhead Books. 255 pages.
29.
Richard V. Reeves. 2017. Dream Hoarders: How the American upper middle class is leaving everyone else in the dust, why that is a problem, and what to do about it. Brookings Institute Press. 156 pages.
30.
Steven Hill. 2015. Raw Deal: How the uber economy and runaway capitalism are screwing American workers. St. Martin's Press. 262 pages.
31.
Rachel Sherman. 2017. Uneasy Street: the anxieties of affluence. Princeton University Press. 237 pages.
32.
David Sloan Wilson. 2007. Evolution for Everyone: How Darwin's theory can change the way we think about our lives. Bantam Dell. 349 pages.
33.
Wayne Leighton and Edward Lopez. 2013. Madmen, intellectuals, and academic scribblers. Stanford University Press. 190 pages.
34.
James Surowiecki. 2004. The Wisdom of Crowds. Anchor Books. 282 pages.
35.
Dani Rodrik. 2018. Straight Talk on Trade: Idea for Sane World Economy. Princeton University Press. 274 pages.
36.
Len Fisher. 2008. Rock, Paper, Scissors: Game theory in everyday life. Basic Books. 199 pages.
37.
W. Brian Arthur. 2009. The Nature of Technology: What it is and How it evolves. Free Press. 216 pages.
38.
Nassim Nicholas Taleb. 2018. Skin in the Game: Hidden asymmetries in daily life. Random House. 236 pages.
39.
Leslie R. Crutchfield. 2018. How Change happens: why some social movements succeed while others don't. Wiley. 183 pages.
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