Al-Qanun fi al-Tibb — The Canon of Medicine
Ibn Sina (Avicenna) · 11th century
He wrote the medical standard work taught for 600 years across Europe and the Orient. As a Kurd living between worlds, Avicenna is not merely history — he is evidence.
Library
Books, films and ideas — the ones that shaped me.
Not a complete list. Not required reading. Only what truly left something behind — in thought, in feeling, in the way I work.
Three men who reimagined the world — centuries before modernity claimed the idea as its own.
Ibn Sina (Avicenna) · 11th century
He wrote the medical standard work taught for 600 years across Europe and the Orient. As a Kurd living between worlds, Avicenna is not merely history — he is evidence.
Al-Khwarizmi · 9th century
The man who gave the world algebra. His name became 'algorithm'. Every AI model that exists today carries part of his DNA.
Al-Biruni · 11th century
Mathematician, astronomer, anthropologist, physician. He measured the Earth before Europe understood what it was standing on.
Minds that did not fit their time — and changed time precisely because of it.
Richard Feynman
Physics as a philosophy of life. Curiosity as the only religion.
Sylvia Nasar
John Nash. Genius, madness, equilibrium. A life that shows the mind as both the most dangerous and most beautiful place.
Robert Kanigel
Ramanujan — with no formal training, from India, he transformed mathematics. Origin is not a boundary.
Books that show science at its strongest when it remains human.
Siddhartha Mukherjee
A biography of cancer. Science that remains human.
Atul Gawande
What medicine cannot do — and what it must do anyway.
Bill Bryson
The human body as nature’s greatest wonder. Every page an opening.
Understanding systems — from within.
Kevin Mitnick
Hacking is not merely criminality — it is the deepest form of understanding a system.
Kevin Mitnick
An autobiography about systems, boundaries and the question: what is actually forbidden?
Margaret Cheney
Nikola Tesla — the man who invented the future and was forgotten for it. Until the world needed him.
Books I did not merely read — but, in a way, lived.
Marjane Satrapi
Iran, childhood, exile — in images. Close to my own story.
Albert Camus
The feeling of never quite belonging. I know it.
Viktor Frankl
Finding meaning — even when everything collapses.
Not popcorn cinema. Films that ask a question and refuse an easy answer.
Ron Howard
Nash. Mathematics. Madness. Beauty.
Morten Tyldum
Alan Turing — the man who helped end the Second World War and was punished for who he was.
Matt Brown
Ramanujan. Intuition beyond proof.
Christopher Nolan
Physics as poetry.
Alex Garland
AI, consciousness, ethics — in 108 minutes.
Vincent Paronnaud & Marjane Satrapi
Animation. Iran. Truth.
This list keeps growing. Not everything that shaped me can be measured in titles.