Whether it’s an unforeseen financial crash, a shock election result, or an expected barbecue season that sees record rainfall, forecasts have impacts on us all. Forewarned is a consumer’s guide to prediction, based on the very latest scientific research. By the end of the book you’ll be better placed to make informed decisions in a volatile world. You’ll know when forecasts can be a reliable guide to the vicissitudes and uncertainties of the future - and when they are best ignored.
This provides a satisfactory summary of the art and science of forecasting. It is well-written and very easy to read. There isn't much new for those familiar with the likes of Nassim Taleb, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, Philip Tetlock, and so on.
Forewarned: A Skeptic's Guide to Prediction (2017) by Paul Godwin looks at when predictions are likely to be good, when they are likely to be bad and how to make better predictions and forecasts.
The book covers similar material to other books like Tetlock's Expert Political Opinion. There are also lots of references to the work of Kahneman and Tversky. Taleb is also referred to frequently.
There is a discussion of how scenario planning can be useful and how companies have used it successfully.
The book isn't bad. If you've read lot of similar things much of the material will be familiar but there should be something new for most people in the book.
some good points here and there, but basically this is just another psychology book, reheating things we already know. There is also a rather ugly elitist streak running through it all