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The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives
Now R310.00(eB 3100)
Delivery time: Usually within 5 working days. Country: United KingdomFormat: Hardcover
Publisher: Allen LaneISBN: 9780713999228 Publication date: May 2008 Thickness: 27mm Pages: 272
The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives
Author: Leonard Mlodinow
Now R310.00
Examines the law of the Drunkard's Walk in relation to everyday human life, the way in which we are all continually pushed this way and that by a variety of random events that, together with our reactions to them, account for much of our particular path in life. In 1905, Albert Einstein published a shocking explanation of Brownian Motion, the random movement of particles, likening it to the kind you would observe watching a drunkard stumbling down the road. The Drunkard's Walk became a powerful tool in understanding the purely random - that, which by definition, has no specific pattern. In his new book, Leonard Mlodinow examines the law of the Drunkard's Walk in relation to everyday human life, the way in which we are all continually pushed this way and that by a variety of random events that, together with our reactions to them, account for much of our particular path in life.Mlodinow reveals the reasons behind behind traffic jams, the spread of rumours on the internet, the length of time you can expect a wad of money to last in Las Vegas, why you have to stir coffee and the way the scent of a perfume spreads through a room, to name but a few. This engaging read reveals the nature of random processes in daily life, thereby altogether altering the way we perceive the events that happen around us. Forget about planning for the future: Chaos is king, the random reigns and no system can beat the house odds.So one might conclude from onetime Caltech physicist Mlodinow's spry look at the rising field - and, it seems, publishing trend - of what might be called randomness studies. As he writes, affectingly, his mother, who survived the Holocaust, subscribed to the forget-planning school after her careful sister was consigned to death. Her experience, he writes, has taught me to appreciate the absence of bad luck, the absence of events that might have brought us down, and the absence of the disease, war, famine, and accident that have not - or have not yet - befallen us. Small comforts, perhaps, but the case studies he assembles point strongly to the essential vanity of human wishes, whether they be efforts to beat the odds at Vegas or to predict the chartbusting potential of a screenplay. On the second note, Mlodinow (Feynman's Rainbow: A Search for Beauty in Physics and Life, 2003, etc.), who knows his Hollywood, quotes a studio executive who once remarked, If I had said yes to all the projects I turned down, and no to all the other ones I took, it would have worked out about the same. Thus randomness, which plays havoc with probability and makes it devilishly hard for ordinary mortals to discern trends and, moreover, exceptions to trends. Mixing hard science with an easygoing approach that makes liberal but not annoying use of pop-culture references, Mlodinow ventures onto conceptually strange ground: the law of the sample space, for instance, which is supposed to apply only to outcomes that are equally probable but manages to find, yes, exceptions. He delights in finding the limits of probability, as with the elderly French woman who mortgaged her desirable apartment to a young lawyer who was to take it over after her death, then proceeded to outlive him - indeed, to attain the age of 122, skewing all the statistics.A science geek's delight, and useful reading for the inveterate gambler of the house. (Kirkus Reviews)
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