Weirdest Maths Quotes
Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
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David Darling30 ratings, 3.47 average rating, 3 reviews
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Weirdest Maths Quotes
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“Statistics can easily fool us if used incorrectly, or if we fail to take in the whole picture of what’s going on. The situation is even worse when data are presented in a way that’s deliberately misleading – as often happens in advertising and politics. Without resorting to outright lies, there are plenty of ways to distort data to create a false impression.”
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
“The expression ‘There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics’ was popularised by Mark Twain and attributed by him, in his autobiography, to the nineteenth-century British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli.”
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
“You’re more likely to die from a falling coconut than from a shark attack, and more likely to die on your birthday than any other day of the year. The average person falls asleep in seven minutes and, over a lifetime, spends twenty-five years sleeping. About 11 percent of the population are left-handed. The most typical human face on Earth is that of a 28-year-old Chinese man.”
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
“Truth and beauty are closely related but not the same. You’re never sure that you have the truth. All you’re doing is striving towards better and better truths and the light that guides you is beauty.”
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
“There’s evidence, too, that being good at maths is tied to a more general capacity to spot hidden structures in data. This could explain why it’s common to find people who excel at both maths and music, and why training at chess can help improve maths scores – both music and chess have complex data structures at their heart.”
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
“Various factors, it seems, contribute to what we call genius and the forms it may take: speed of thought (at which von Neumann, by all accounts, was exceptional), depth of understanding (at which, according to Wigner, Einstein excelled), originality, creativity, and so forth. Sometimes, too, genius may be narrow in its focus – as in the case of Einstein or Ramanujan – while at other times, as illustrated by von Neumann, and to an even greater extent by some Renaissance figures such as Leonardo da Vinci, it can range over many subjects.”
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
“Knowing too much about a subject can make us overly cautious. Having a lot of conventional wisdom may make us doubt our own hunches and intuition because we’re more likely to think that any seemingly good ideas that pop into our heads are wrong if they don’t square with what we’ve previously learned.”
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
― Weirdest Maths: At the Frontiers of Reason
