Partial Truths: How Fractions Distort Our Thinking

Awards:   Winner of Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2022
Author:   James C. Zimring
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231216623


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   20 February 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Partial Truths: How Fractions Distort Our Thinking


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Awards

  • Winner of Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2022

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   James C. Zimring
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
Imprint:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231216623


ISBN 10:   0231216629
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   20 February 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction Part I. The Problem of Misperception 1. The Fraction Problem 2. How Our Minds Fractionate the World 3. Confirmation Bias: How Your Mind Filters Evidence Based on Preexisting Beliefs 4. Bias with a Cherry on Top: Cherry-Picking the Data Part II. The Fraction Problem in Different Arenas 5. The Criminal Justice System 6. The March to War 7. Patterns in the Static 8. Alternative and New Age Beliefs 9. The Appearance of Design in the Natural World 10. The Hard Sciences Part III. Reversing Misperception 11. How Misperceiving the Fraction Can Be Advantageous 12. Can We Solve the Problems with Human Perception and Reasoning and Should We Even Try? Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

In this brilliant follow up to What Science Is and How It Really Works, James Zimring engages the reader in a kind of detective story about the classic mistakes of human reasoning, due to our innumeracy. From bad social policy to pandemics to terrorism, he shows how human decision making often gets it so wrong. What I loved most about Partial Truths though is that he didn't just establish that we make errors, but why. This amounts to a handy, insightful, eminently readable guide to the intricate evolution of the human mind itself. If you enjoyed Daniel Kahneman's Thinking, Fast and Slow, you'll love this book. -- Lee McIntyre, author of <i>How to Talk to a Science Denier: Conversations with Flat Earthers, Climate Deniers, and Others Who Defy Reason</i> Using the simple notion of a fraction as a lens, James Zimring insightfully discusses a remarkable variety of issues from cognitive psychology to New Age beliefs to misunderstandings in politics. Thoughtful and wide-ranging. -- John Allen Paulos, Temple University, and author of <i>A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper</i> and <i>Innumeracy</i> In Partial Truths, Zimring offers an entertaining and illuminating look at how we all misunderstand—and how the media and politicians misrepresent, and even scientists sometimes distort—the numbers and data that underlie so much of our conventional wisdom. -- David Zweig, author of <i>Invisibles: The Power of Anonymous Work in an Age of Relentless Self-Promotion</i> Zimring’s book Partial Truths takes a walk through the various ways human cognition fails when dealing with numbers, probabilities, risk, and assessing evidence. Along the way, Zimring takes us through a bestiary of fascinating case studies both historical and modern. His clear prose illuminates the ways that politicians take advantage of our cognitive shortcomings, the ways that numbers mislead us in everyday life, and what this means for important social topics like racialized criminal justice, war mongering, and public belief in science. While Zimring follows previous authors in advocating for improved information literacy, he takes a more measured approach. Zimring is admirably aware of the ways that human cognition is hard to change, and recognizes that sometimes our reasoning biases actually benefit us, even as he helps the reader see these biases more clearly. A great book for those grappling with the confusion of our modern information environments. -- Cailin O'Connor, author of <i>The Misinformation Age: How False Beliefs Spread</i> Numbers become far more than abstractions in the capable hands of James Zimring. I learned something fascinating and enlightening on nearly every page of Partial Truths­ – about politics, social policy, economics, cultural choices, criminal justice, and much more. -- Steven Lubet, author of <i>Interrogating Ethnography: Why Evidence Matters</i> Zimring does a great job breaking down complex theories of statistics and mathematical equations into relatable stories and examples. His perception… is fascinating. * AIPT * Partial Truths is a book to read through very carefully and then keep next to your desk. . . . Let’s all keep help like [this] close at hand at least until the next time our prejudices are about to make us decide wrongly or vote stupidly. * Forbes * As mathematics (or mathematics adjacent) treatises go Partial Truths is as reader-friendly and interesting as they come. * Brain Drain Blog * The book is easy to read, has entertaining examples, and no math is required. This book should be required reading for all. * Choice *


In this brilliant follow up to What Science Is and How It Really Works, James Zimring engages the reader in a kind of detective story about the classic mistakes of human reasoning, due to our innumeracy. From bad social policy to pandemics to terrorism, he shows how human decision making often gets it so wrong. What I loved most about Partial Truths though is that he didn't just establish that we make errors, but why. This amounts to a handy, insightful, eminently readable guide to the intricate evolution of the human mind itself. If you enjoyed Daniel Kahneman's Thinking, Fast and Slow, you'll love this book. -- Lee McIntyre, author of <i>How to Talk to a Science Denier</i> Using the simple notion of a fraction as a lens, James Zimring insightfully discusses a remarkable variety of issues from cognitive psychology to New Age beliefs to misunderstandings in politics. Thoughtful and wide-ranging. -- John Allen Paulos, Temple University, and author of <i>A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper</i> and <i>Innumeracy</i> In Partial Truths, Zimring offers an entertaining and illuminating look at how we all misunderstand—and how the media and politicians misrepresent, and even scientists sometimes distort—the numbers and data that underlie so much of our conventional wisdom. -- David Zweig, author of <i>Invisibles: The Power of Anonymous Work in an Age of Relentless Self-Promotion</i> Zimring’s book Partial Truths takes a walk through the various ways human cognition fails when dealing with numbers, probabilities, risk, and assessing evidence. Along the way, Zimring takes us through a bestiary of fascinating case studies both historical and modern. His clear prose illuminates the ways that politicians take advantage of our cognitive shortcomings, the ways that numbers mislead us in everyday life, and what this means for important social topics like racialized criminal justice, war mongering, and public belief in science. While Zimring follows previous authors in advocating for improved information literacy, he takes a more measured approach. Zimring is admirably aware of the ways that human cognition is hard to change, and recognizes that sometimes our reasoning biases actually benefit us, even as he helps the reader see these biases more clearly. A great book for those grappling with the confusion of our modern information environments. -- Cailin O'Connor, author of <i>The Misinformation Age: How False Beliefs Spread</i> Numbers become far more than abstractions in the capable hands of James Zimring. I learned something fascinating and enlightening on nearly every page of Partial Truths­ – about politics, social policy, economics, cultural choices, criminal justice, and much more. -- Steven Lubet, author of <i>Interrogating Ethnography: Why Evidence Matters</i> Zimring does a great job breaking down complex theories of statistics and mathematical equations into relatable stories and examples. His perception… is fascinating. * AIPT * Partial Truths is a book to read through very carefully and then keep next to your desk. Let’s all keep help like [this] close at hand at least until the next time our prejudices are about to make us decide wrongly or vote stupidly. * Forbes * As mathematics (or mathematics adjacent) treatises go Partial Truths is as reader-friendly and interesting as they come. * Brain Drain Blog * The book is easy to read, has entertaining examples, and no math is required. This book should be required reading for all. * Choice *


Author Information

James C. Zimring is the Thomas W. Tillack Professor of Experimental Pathology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. He is the author of What Science Is and How It Really Works (2019).

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