How do you predict something that has never happened before?
There's a useful calculation being employed by Wall Street, Silicon Valley and maths professors all over the world, and it predicts that the human species will become extinct in 760 years. Unfortunately, there is disagreement over how to apply the formula, and some argue that we might only have twenty years left.
Originally devised by British clergyman Thomas Bayes, the theorem languished in obscurity for two hundred years before being resurrected as the lynchpin of the digital economy. With brief detours into archaeology, philology, and overdue library books, William Poundstone explains how we can use it to predict pretty much anything. What is the chance that there are multiple universes? How long will Hamilton run? Will the US stock market continue to perform as well this century as it has for the last hundred years? And are we really all doomed?
William Poundstone is the author of fourteen books, including the international bestseller Are You Smart Enough to Work at Google? He lives in Los Angeles.
Title: How to Predict Everything: The Formula Transforming What We Know About Life and the Universe
Author: Poundstone, William
ISBN: 9781786075710
Binding:
Publisher: Oneworld Publications
Publication Date: 2019-06-06
Number of Pages: 320
Weight: 0.5036 kg
'Thoroughly entertaining reading and it's not hard to foresee a future in which readers everywhere will find it impossible to put down.'
*
E&T Magazine *
'a fun and energetic romp through a mishmash of philosophical and cosmological ideas... an engagingly written foray.'
* The Inquisitive Biologist *
'A fascinating sweep through so many interesting and important insights into how we can understand our future, masterfully knitted together.' -- Bobby Duffy, author of
The Perils of Perception'One of the best science writers of our time has taken on one of the most interesting and important subjects of all time - how to predict the future under great uncertainty... A gripping read.'
-- Michael Shermer, author of
Heavens on Earth'A very interesting and definitive book on this subject.'
-- J. Richard Gott, astrophysicist and author of
The Cosmic Web