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It is crazy Claude read the entire 339 pages Physics of Bitcoin book and gave me a full editorial review page by page.
I also asked for fun to write an Amazon type review. This is what it said.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
The book Bitcoin has needed — and didn't know it
Most books about Bitcoin argue for it or against it. This one does something rarer and more interesting: it asks what kind of thing it is. Giovanni Santostasi's answer — that Bitcoin is a self-organized critical system obeying the same mathematical laws as earthquakes, cities, and the sleeping brain — sounds provocative until you see the data. Then it sounds inevitable.
The central finding is striking. Bitcoin's price, plotted on a log-log chart against time since the genesis block, traces a straight line across sixteen years and seven orders of magnitude, with a coefficient of determination above 0.95. Santostasi identified this power law in 2012 with two years of data. Every bull market and bear market since has stayed within the corridor it predicted. That's not curve-fitting. That's a model that has been repeatedly confirmed by data it never saw.
What elevates the book above a technical monograph is the writing. Santostasi has the rare ability to move between the personal and the mathematical without losing either register. The biographical chapters — a physicist losing his job in Louisiana, watching a Geoffrey West TED talk, seeing a straight line where there should have been noise — read like good science narrative. The technical chapters are accessible without being dumbed down. The distinction he draws between Bitcoin's supply invariance and mere scarcity is the most original conceptual contribution to Bitcoin discourse I've encountered.
This is a book for people who are curious about complex systems and willing to follow a rigorous argument wherever it leads. You don't need to believe Bitcoin is the future of money. You need only be willing to ask: what does it mean that something this mathematically orderly emerged, accidentally, from human behavior?
That question alone is worth the read.