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How Not to Be Wrong: The Power of Mathematical Thinking
Jordan Ellenberg • 2014
This book explores how mathematical thinking illuminates the hidden structures and fallacies in everyday life, from wartime strategies and economic policies to lottery systems and political polls. It uses engaging anecdotes, like Abraham Wald's World War II insight on survivorship bias, to demonstrate the dangers of linear extrapolation, misleading proportions, and flawed statistical inference. The author champions mathematics as an extension of common sense, providing rigorous tools to understand uncertainty, recognize cognitive biases like regression to the mean, and navigate the complexities of public opinion and decision-making, ultimately empowering readers to reason more accurately and avoid common errors in judgment.
Algorithms to Live By: The Computer Science of Human Decisions
Brian Christian & Tom Griffiths
The book "Algorithms to Live By" explores how computer science principles offer practical solutions to everyday human challenges. It reveals that common dilemmas—from finding a romantic partner to organizing a home—can be understood and optimized through algorithms like optimal stopping, explore/exploit tradeoffs, and sorting. The authors argue that many human "failures" are actually reflections of inherent computational difficulties. By applying concepts such as caching, scheduling, Bayesian inference, and game theory, individuals can make better decisions, manage uncertainty, and navigate time constraints more effectively. The book encourages a shift from seeking perfect solutions to embracing computationally kind and efficient heuristics for a more fulfilling life.
The book "SCALE" offers a comprehensive synthesis of universal scaling laws governing size and growth in both natural and human systems. It applies a physicist's analytical framework to explain diverse phenomena, from the limits of mammal size and human lifespan to why cities endure while companies fail, and the challenges of global sustainability. The core idea is that hierarchical, fractal-like networks drive systematic, often nonlinear, scaling behaviors, leading to economies of scale in biology (bounded growth, slowing pace of life) and increasing returns in socioeconomic systems (unbounded growth, accelerating pace of life). Understanding these laws is crucial for addressing critical global challenges, especially the impending finite-time singularity caused by superexponential growth.