Four ways of thinking A journey into human complexity

David Sumpter, 1973-

Book - 2024

"Acclaimed mathematician David Sumpter shares practical and insightful solutions for navigating the chaos and complexity of our lives. What is the best way to think about the world? How often do we consider how our own thinking might impact the way we approach our daily decisions? Could it help or hinder our relationships, our careers, or even our health? As acclaimed mathematician David Sumpter shows, thinking about thinking is something we rarely do, yet it is something science questions all the time. He has spent decades studying what we could all learn from the mindsets of scientists, and Four Ways of Thinking is the result. Here he reveals the four easily applied approaches to our problems: statistical, interactive, chaotic, and c...omplex. Combining engaging personal experience with practical advice and inspiring tales of groundbreaking scientific pioneers (with a tiny bit of number crunching along the way), Sumpter shows how these tried and tested methods can help us with every conundrum, from how to bicker less with our partners to pitching to a tough crowd-and in doing so, change our lives"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
New York : Flatiron Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
David Sumpter, 1973- (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Item Description
"Originally published in Great Britain in 2023 by Allen Lane, part of the Penguin Random House group of companies."
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781250806260
  • Statistical thinking
  • Interactive thinking
  • Chaotic thinking
  • Complex thinking.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A mathematician explains how to deal with the world. Sumpter, a professor of applied mathematics and the author of Ten Equations That Rule the World, writes that our thinking as we navigate life can be classified as either statistical (or stable), periodic, chaotic, or complex. Making his approach as simple as possible, the author divides the book into four sections, one for each category of thought. The first section may seem like the easiest, but statistics can be misleading or even meaningless. In his discussion of periodic thinking, one of his anecdotes involves Adam Smith. A professor explained to him that Smith "had been wrong, because his stable thinking had convinced him that the market would reach and stay at equilibrium. But Smith's thinking was, Parker said, reductionist. Accounting for our interactions, the way we also behaved like animal herds, showed that human society was anything but stable." Perhaps the most startling category, chaos as a mathematical and scientific entity is a 20th-century discovery. (For more on the science of chaos, turn to Peter Gleick's groundbreaking 1987 book, Chaos.) As Sumpter demonstrates, chaos is not the same as total confusion, but rather a specific natural phenomenon in which tiny changes in initial conditions lead to enormous unpredictable effects. This is why, no matter how much information computers can gather about weather conditions today, predictions beyond a week are unreliable. Unlike the previous three, complex thinking is less about solutions than "finding the stories which help us to better understand ourselves, as well as those around us." Despite the upbeat conclusion, Sumpter has not written a self-improvement guide or another how-to-lie-with-statistics knockoff. Rather, he offers a fairly clearheaded popular mathematics survey that will appeal to readers of Daniel Kahneman's Thinking, Fast and Slow and similar books. The mathematics of problem-solving--always ingenious and often helpful. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.