Joshua R. Taylor’s Reviews > How Not to Be Wrong: The Hidden Maths of Everyday Life > Status Update
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 370 of 468
It's interesting how the author revisits eugenics again and again as an example of where quantitative reasoning can be bad.
— Jun 03, 2018 02:59AM
Like flag
Joshua R.’s Previous Updates
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 422 of 468
'...the quibblers, the naysayers and the maybesayers...don't make things happen.'
— Jun 05, 2018 03:50PM
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 370 of 468
'There is a real danger that, by strengthening our abilities to analyse some questions mathematically, we acquire a general confidence in our beliefs, which extends unjustifiably to those things we're still wrong about.'
— Jun 04, 2018 01:30PM
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 305 of 468
The author uses lots of sports analogies I guess to help aid the layperson. But personally they make me fall asleep 😴
— Jun 02, 2018 07:24AM
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 293 of 468
Well that was an incredibly long-winded discussion of the lottery.
Managed to touch on probability, chaos theory, utility theory, perspective geometry and information theory 😂
— May 28, 2018 11:50AM
Managed to touch on probability, chaos theory, utility theory, perspective geometry and information theory 😂
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 181 of 468
Probability can be seen as a degree of belief that something is true. Numerically flavoured advice.
— May 25, 2018 02:53PM
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 159 of 468
"The purpose of statistics isn't to tell us what to believe, but to tell us what to do. Statistics is about making decisions, not answering questions."
Big fan of this thinking.
— May 25, 2018 01:26PM
Big fan of this thinking.
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 137 of 468
This is somewhat shaking my blind trust of scientific research
— May 22, 2018 02:12PM
Joshua R. Taylor
is on page 63 of 468
The concepts are explained really well and simply so far! Have also picked up all sorts of ways to think about maths itself too. I never thought of it as an extension of my common sense.
— May 19, 2018 01:47PM

