You cannot make a trip to the doctor, watch a football game, or even go to the grocery store without some statistic staring you down. Your age, weight, and cholesterol make you a high risk for diabetes ... the chance that your team will win the game is 12.5 percent ... 4 out of 5 dentists like this toothpaste. What does it all mean? How We Measure Life: Statistic Stories in a World of Numbers tells you what all those numbers mean. But the book does not spit out a bunch of mathematical formulas; the book tells stories. Stories that explain statistics explaining popular culture, sports, and history.
You’re confused about that false positive warning in that drug commercial, the 2007 comedy Juno explains how medical tests - including pregnancy tests - fail and why. Not clear about what your coworkers are talking about when they say ’black swans.’ the 1997 blockbuster Titanic make senses of the concept.
Whether in business, psychology, biology, economics, or just about anything short of basket weaving, statistics play a role. How We Measure Life: Statistic Stories in a World of Numbers shows how professionals in medicine, business, politics, sports, and any other field or endeavor, use numbers. So, just about everyone would gain from reading this book, perhaps even basket weavers.