After I read your post I went to Wikipedia's front page and there is some pretty cool stuff there. On this day, article of the day, did you know, etc., never checked it before but might be worth bookmarking as a homepage. I then searched for Wikipedia in Wikipedia's search engine, even if it was going to destroy the space time continuum, it was a chance I was willing to take. Gave a good explanation of how information is collected, vetted and even the processes shortcomings.And Wikipedia is a great place to find inspiration for gaming material. Just try to look up articles about archeological grave sites without being inspired to put something into a game. And there's plenty of fodder for inspiring a PC or NPC.
Not a "book" per say, but I've found comics to be an amazing source of inspiration. The trick is to use the concept, without the specifics, to keep players from figuring it out. I ran the Knightfall story arc without anyone figuring it out until the very end, and everyone loved it.
The books that a person is going to list gives you a hint as to how they see (or maybe want to see) the world around them.Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel has been quoted three times so far: anyone wants to develop how useful exactly it is for RPGs?
I'll give a controversial reply: a lot of RPGing looks at world building primarily through the lens of geographic and ecological causation - often treated in a rather deterministic fashion - with very little attention to the social. Diamond's book supports that sort of approach.Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel has been quoted three times so far: anyone wants to develop how useful exactly it is for RPGs?
It can be useful for world design, especially when considering how geography can influence the shape of a civilization. I've got some problems with the book from an academic standpoint, geographic determinism and lack of human agency comes to mind, but it can be useful to remember to think about why one city or nation is wealthy while others are not so wealthy.Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel has been quoted three times so far: anyone wants to develop how useful exactly it is for RPGs?
It has, but not a lot. The biggest things are that certain things that would have been treated as "un-educatable disability" are now "we have to try," and that individuation of instruction produces better overall performance in the system, at the cost of educator time and institutional budget.If I had to guess I would assume teaching techniques have evolved since I was in grammar school and high school.
Which back then 99.9% of tests were based on whether you memorized the material or not.
This might explain the lack of common sense in the world these days.That's still an issue, and the recent (last 15 years) moves towards "universal exams" has lead back towards teaching the test matter and ignoring the rest, including ignoring the essential theory to know when and why to use algorithm X, Y or Z.
The problem boils down to it being far easier to grade fact recitation than concept internalization.
This is it exactly. It's very helpful because a lot of people, including a lot of full-time RPG designers of ages past (and even present), don't see how stuff in the world interconnects, what drives things, and how you need to consider stuff holistically to make a convincing and really lively world (which is not necessarily the same as a conceptually cool world). Like WHY is this dungeon here? WHY was it built that way? WHY is it this shape? WHY is it this stone? WHY did the dwarves travel here? What set them off on their travels? Yeah, answering the "who" is easy but so often the "why" is ignored or glossed over, as is the course of events.The books that a person is going to list gives you a hint as to how they see (or maybe want to see) the world around them.
I personally find that any history book written in a way that explains the interconnected and interdisciplinary links of why things have happened, as opposed to just listing the whats and whens in a stale parade of either wars or weddings, to be far more insightful and interesting.
Books like Guns, Germs, and Steel, or Napolean's Buttons, or James Burke's old TV show Connections have given me a far better pallet to paint an imaginary world and history, both of which are important to me when I'm running a game.
I think the issue there is that the lack of common sense is not centered on younger people. They're no more silly than they were when I was young or even when my dad was young.This might explain the lack of common sense in the world these days.