Against the gods The remarkable story of risk

Peter L. Bernstein

Book - 1996

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Subjects
Published
New York : John Wiley & Sons c1996.
Language
English
Main Author
Peter L. Bernstein (-)
Physical Description
383 p.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780471295631
9780471121046
  • To 1200: Beginnings?
  • The Winds of the Greeks and the Role of the Dice?
  • As Easy As I, II, III
  • 1200-1700: A Thousand Outstanding Facts?
  • The Renaissance Gambler?
  • The French Connection?
  • The Remarkable Notions of the Remarkable Notions Man
  • 1700-1900: Measurement Unlimited?
  • Considering the Nature of Man?
  • The Search for Moral Certainty?
  • The Supreme Law of Unreason?
  • The Man with the Sprained Brain?
  • Peapods and Perils?
  • The Fabric of Felicity
  • 1900-1960: Clouds of Vagueness and the Demand for Precision?
  • The Measure of Our Ignorance?
  • The Radically Distinct Notion?
  • The Man Who Counted Everything Except Calories?
  • The Strange Case of the Anonymous Stockbroker?
  • Degrees of Belief: Exploring Uncertainty?
  • The Failure of Invariance?
  • The Theory Police?
  • The Fantastic System of Side Bets?
  • Awaiting The Wildness?
  • Notes?
  • Bibliography?
  • Indexes
Review by Booklist Review

Bernstein's lively history chronicles a profound transformation in attitudes about the future. How one's fate changed from depending less on capricious outcomes and more on predictable ones forms the backbone of the narrative. His central characters are mathematicians who began pondering the statistics of gambling, or gamblers pondering the risks of gambling: about one sixteenth-century polymath, Girolamo Cardano, Bernstein writes that his "credentials as a gambling addict alone would justify his appearance in the history of risk," and that comment is typical of Bernstein's engaging presentation. Amid his recounting of the insights into probability from Pascal to Keynes, he touches on an array of modern fields in which risk analysis is crucial--insurance, commodities futures, stock markets, and that old standard, gambling. This cornucopia of biographical sketches, mathematical examples, and reflections on the nature of human expectations about the future faces little risk of idling in libraries; patrons of the business section might be keenest to read it. --Gilbert Taylor

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Risk management, which assumes that future risks can be understood, measured and to some extent predicted, is the focus of this solid, thoroughgoing history. Probability theory, pioneered by 17th-century French mathematicians Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat, has made possible the design of great bridges, electric power utilities and insurance policies. The statistical sampling methods invented by dour Swiss scientist Jacob Bernoulli undergird diverse activities such as the testing of new drugs, stock-picking and wine tasting. Bernstein (Capital Ideas) animates his narrative with a colorful cast of risk-analyzers, including gambling addict Girolamo Cardano, 16th-century Italian physician to the Pope; and John Maynard Keynes, whose concerns over economic uncertainty compelled him to recommend an active, interventionist role for government. Bernstein also traces the development of business forecasting, game theory, insurance and derivatives, and surveys recent advances in risk forecasting made possible through chaos theory and by the development of neural networks. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

For several centuries, mathematics has been the language of the exact sciences. Only in the 20th century has mathematics become predominant in other fields, particularly economics and finance. In this book, Bernstein (Capital Ideas: The Improbable Origins of Modern Wall Street, LJ 12/91), head of an economic consulting firm, traces the development of probability theory from its beginnings in analyzing games of chance, through its application to statistical theory and insurance, up to its present use in developing investment strategies to control risk. He includes excellent sections on portfolio analysis and on investments in derivatives. Bernstein clearly describes the people, their work, and the events that have revolutionized the thinking on Wall Street. A worthwhile acquisition for business and math collections.‘Harold D. Shane, Baruch Coll., CUNY (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A history of probability from an economist and author of a history of Wall Street (Capital Ideas, 1991). Modern risk theory dates from a little geometric model invented in 1654 called Pascal's Triangle, which Blaise Pascal used to address a perennial intellectual question: If two participants quit a game of chance before finishing, how is the pot divided? Pascal's Triangle answered the question by showing the proportions of probable outcomes at any given stage of a game. Games dominated theories of risk for a long while, until the English began analyzing death records, resulting in the first actuarial tables, and the Dutch did the same with the successes and failures of merchant shipping. The bell curve and the concept of standard deviations arrived, after much tedious experimentation, in the 19th century--and are very much with us still, in political polling, for instance, and in the analysis of stocks. These classical concepts retain their value, but the irrational, catastrophic events of the 20th century led economists such as John Maynard Keynes to discard the past as a reliable gauge for the future and embrace uncertainty as the only real operating principle. Chaos theorists are presently engaged in an attempt to computerize the minutiae of reality, arguing the need for ongoing, ever-changing models of the future, and rejecting the mean of the bell curve, because the mean changes even as it is identified. There is no norm, in other words, but Bernstein argues that this is cause for hope, rather than despair. He concurs with Keynes that probabilities exist; we simply do not know enough to find them. Therefore, an informed decision matters all the more: A calculated risk is superior to a fool's wager. A dense but compelling model of how the world works.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.