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Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction Hardcover – September 29, 2015

4.4 out of 5 stars 4,348 ratings

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY THE ECONOMIST 

The most important book on decision making since Daniel Kahneman's Thinking, Fast and Slow.—Jason Zweig, The Wall Street Journal
 
Everyone would benefit from seeing further into the future, whether buying stocks, crafting policy, launching a new product, or simply planning the week’s meals. Unfortunately, people tend to be terrible forecasters. As Wharton professor Philip Tetlock showed in a landmark 2005 study, even experts’ predictions are only slightly better than chance. However, an important and underreported conclusion of that study was that some experts do have real foresight, and Tetlock has spent the past decade trying to figure out why. What makes some people so good? And can this talent be taught?
 
In
Superforecasting, Tetlock and coauthor Dan Gardner offer a masterwork on prediction, drawing on decades of research and the results of a massive, government-funded forecasting tournament. The Good Judgment Project involves tens of thousands of ordinary people—including a Brooklyn filmmaker, a retired pipe installer, and a former ballroom dancer—who set out to forecast global events. Some of the volunteers have turned out to be astonishingly good. They’ve beaten other benchmarks, competitors, and prediction markets. They’ve even beaten the collective judgment of intelligence analysts with access to classified information. They are "superforecasters."
 
In this groundbreaking and accessible book, Tetlock and Gardner show us how we can learn from this elite group. Weaving together stories of forecasting successes (the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound) and failures (the Bay of Pigs) and interviews with a range of high-level decision makers, from David Petraeus to Robert Rubin, they show that good forecasting doesn’t require powerful computers or arcane methods. It involves gathering evidence from a variety of sources, thinking probabilistically, working in teams, keeping score, and being willing to admit error and change course.

Superforecasting offers the first demonstrably effective way to improve our ability to predict the future—whether in business, finance, politics, international affairs, or daily life—and is destined to become a modern classic.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

A New York Times Editors' Choice
A
Washington Post Bestseller
A Hudson Booksellers Best Business Interest Book of 2015
Longlisted for the Financial Times and McKinsey Business Book of the Year Award
Winner of the Axiom Business Book Award in Business Theory (Gold Medal)

“A top choice [for best book of 2015] among the world’s biggest names in finance and economics... Eurasia Group founder Ian Bremmer, Deutsche Bank Chief U.S. Economist Joe LaVorgna, and Citigroup Vice Chairman Peter Orszag were among those giving it a thumbs-up.”
Bloomberg Business

“The material in
Superforecasting is new, and includes a compendium of best practices for prediction… The accuracy that ordinary people regularly attained through their meticulous application did amaze me… [It offers] us all an opportunity to understand and react more intelligently to the confusing world around us.”
New York Times Book Review

"Tetlock's thesis is that politics and human affairs are not inscrutable mysteries. Instead, they are a bit like weather forecasting, where short-term predictions are possible and reasonably accurate... The techniques and habits of mind set out in this book are a gift to anyone who has to think about what the future might bring. In other words, to everyone."
The Economist

"Tetlock’s work is fascinating and important, and he and Gardner have written it up here with verve."
The Financial Times

Superforecasting is the most important scientific study I’ve ever read on prediction.”
Cass R. Sunstein, The Bloomberg View

"Just as modern medicine began when a farsighted few began to collect data and keep track of outcomes, to trust objective 'scoring' over their own intuitions, it's time now for similar demands to be made of the experts who lead public opinion. It's time for evidence-based forecasting."
—The Washington Post

"Superforecasting, by Philip Tetlock and Dan Gardner, is one of the most interesting business and finance books published in 2015.”
John Kay, The Financial Times

"One of Tetlock's key points is that these aren't innate skills: they can be both taught and learned... Tetlock's 'Ten Commandments For Aspiring Superforecasters' should probably have a place of honor in most business meeting rooms."
Forbes

"The key to becoming a better forecaster, if not a super one, according to Tetlock is the same as any other endeavor: practice, practice, practice."
The Street

"In this captivating book, Tetlock argues that success is all about the approach: foresight is not a gift but rather a product of a particular way of thinking... In each chapter, the author augments his research with compelling interviews, anecdotes, and historical context, using accessible real-world examples to frame what could otherwise be dense subject matter. His writing is so engaging and his argument so tantalizing, readers will quickly be drawn into the challenge - in the appendix, the author provides a concise training manual to do just that. A must-read field guide for the intellectually curious."
Kirkus Reviews, starred

"Tetlock and Gardner believe anyone can improve their forecasting ability by learning from the way they work. If that's true, people in business and finance who make an effort to do so have a lot to gain — and those who don't, much to lose."
The Financial Post

"Superforecasting is a very good book. In fact it is essential reading — which I have never said in any of my previous MT reviews... It should be on every manager's and investor's reading list around the topics du jour of decision-making, prediction and behavioural economics."
Management Today

"I've been hard on social science, even suggesting that 'social science' is an oxymoron. I noted, however, that social science has enormous potential, especially when it combines 'rigorous empiricism with a resistance to absolute answers.' The work of Philip Tetlock possesses these qualities."
Scientific American

"One of the best books I've read this year... Superforecasting is a must read book."
Seeking Alpha

"Keen to show that not all forecasting is a flop, Tetlock has conducted a new experiment that shows how you can make good forecasts, ones that routinely improve on predictions made by even the most well-informed expert. The book is full of excellent advice — it is the best thing I have read on predictions, which is a subject I am keen on... Gardner has turned the research into readable examples and a flowing text, without losing rigour... This book shows that you can be better at forecasting."
The Times of London

"We now expect every medicine to be tested before it is used. We ought to expect that everybody who aspires to high office is trained to understand why they are so likely to make mistakes forecasting complex events... Politics is harder than physics but Tetlock has shown that it doesn't have to be like astrology."
The Spectator

“Philip Tetlock is the world expert on a vital subject. 
Superforecasting is the wonderful story of how he and his research team got ordinary people to beat experts in a very serious game. It is also a manual for thinking clearly in an uncertain world. Read it.” 
Daniel Kahneman, winner of the Nobel Prize and author of Thinking, Fast and Slow

Superforecasting is a rare book that will make you smarter and wiser. One of the giants of behavioral science reveals how to improve at predicting the future.”
Adam GrantNew York Times bestselling author of Originals 
 
“The best way to know if an idea is right is to see if it predicts the future. But which ideas, which methods, which people have a track record of non-obvious predictions vindicated by the course of events? The answers will surprise you, and they have radical implications for politics, policy, journalism, education, and even epistemology—how we can best gain knowledge about the world. The casual style of 
Superforecasting belies the profundity of its message.”
Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University, and author of The Better Angels of Our Nature

“Philip Tetlock’s Superforecasting is a common-sense guide to thinking about decision-making and the future by a man who knows this terrain like no one else.”
Ian Bremmer, Bloomberg Business’ Best Books of 2015

“In this accessible and lively book, Tetlock and Gardner recognize the centrality of probabilistic thinking to sound forecasting. Whether you are a policymaker or anyone else who wants to approach decisions with great rigor,
Superforecasting will serve as a highly useful guide.”
Robert E. Rubin, Former U.S. Treasury Secretary
 
“How well can we predict the future, really? There is no better way to answer that question than to read this book. You will come away disillusioned about the ability of experts, but also enlightened about how the best forecasters do it—and maybe even hopeful about your own prospects.”
Tyler Cowen, Director of the George Mason University Mercatus Center and author of Average Is Over
 
“For thousands of years, people have listened to those who foretold the future with confidence and little accountability. In this book, Tetlock and Gardner free us from our foolishness. Full of great stories and simple statistics,
Superforecasting gives us a new way of thinking about the complexity of the world, the limitations of our minds, and why some people can consistently outpredict a dart-throwing chimp. Tetlock’s research has the potential to revolutionize foreign policy, economic policy, and your own day-to-day decisions.”
Jonathan Haidt, New York University Stern School of Business, and author of The Righteous Mind
 
“[
Superforecasting] shows that you can get information from a lot of different sources. Knowledge is all around us and it doesn’t have to come from the experts.”
—Joe LaVorgna, Bloomberg Business’ Best Books of 2015
 
“Good judgment and good forecasting are rare, but they turn out to be made of teachable skills. By forcing forecasters to compete, Tetlock discovered what the skills are and how they work, and this book teaches the ability to any interested reader.”
Stewart Brand, President, The Long Now Foundation
 
“Philip Tetlock is renowned for demonstrating that most experts are no better than ‘dart-throwing monkeys’ at predicting elections, wars, economic collapses and other events. In his brilliant new book, Tetlock offers a much more hopeful message, based once again on his own ground-breaking research. He shows that certain people can forecast events with accuracy much better than chance—and so, perhaps, can the rest of us, if we emulate the critical thinking of these ‘superforecasters.’ The self-empowerment genre doesn’t get any smarter and more sophisticated than this.”
John Horgan, Director, Center for Science Writings, Stevens Institute of Technology
 
“Superforecasting is the rare book that is both scholarly and engaging. The lessons are scientific, compelling, and enormously practical. Anyone who is in the forecasting business—and that’s all of us—should drop what they are doing and read it.”
Michael J. Mauboussin, Head of Global Financial Strategies, Credit Suisse

“[
Superforecasting] highlights the techniques and attributes of superforecasters—that is, those whose predictions have been demonstrated to be remarkably accurate—in a manner that’s both rigorous and readable. The lessons are directly relevant to business, finance, government, and politics.”
Peter Orszag, Bloomberg Business’ Best Books of 2015
 
“There isn’t a social scientist in the world I admire more than Phil Tetlock.”
Tim Harford, author of The Undercover Economist
 
“From the Oracle of Delphi to medieval astrologers to modern overconfident experts, forecasters have been either deluded or fraudulent. For the first time,
Superforecasting reveals the secret of making honest, reliable, effective, useful judgments about the future.”
Aaron Brown, Chief Risk Officer of AQR Capital Management and author of The Poker Face of Wall Street
 
“Socrates had the insight in ‘know thyself,’ Kahneman delivered the science in
Thinking, Fast and Slow, and now Tetlock has something we can all apply in Superforecasting.”
Juan Luis Perez, Global Head of UBS Group Research

About the Author

Philip E. Tetlock is the Annenberg University Professor at the University of Pennsylvania and holds appointments in the psychology and political science departments and the Wharton School of Business. He and his wife, Barbara Mellers, are the co-leaders of the Good Judgment Project, a multi-year forecasting study. He is also the author of Expert Political Judgment and (with Aaron Belkin) Counterfactual Thought Experiments in World Politics.
 
Dan Gardner is a journalist and the author of Risk and Future Babble: Why Pundits are Hedgehogs and Foxes Know Best.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Crown; F First Edition (September 29, 2015)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 352 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0804136696
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0804136693
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.25 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.47 x 1.19 x 9.55 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 4,348 ratings

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4,348 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book provides excellent insights and serves as an excellent primer on critical thinking, with one customer noting how it helps structure everyday analysis. Moreover, the book is well-written and customers consider it very useful for decision-making. However, the forecasting accuracy receives mixed reviews, with some praising its handling of uncertainty while others note there's very little actual forecasting content.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

156 customers mention "Insight"145 positive11 negative

Customers find the book provides excellent insights, serving as an excellent primer on critical thinking and containing plenty of information. One customer notes how it helps structure everyday analysis.

"...This book was very valuable for cohesively bringing together the above concepts in the context of a compelling story, based on the DARPA research..." Read more

"...GOOD INTUITIVE PSYCHOLOGISTS: Aware of the value of checking thinking for cognitive and emotional biases In their work ethic, they tend to have:..." Read more

"...They have accurately predicted the outcomes of events about which they have no expertise, questions like “Will conservatives retain their majority..." Read more

"...apply these principles to your everyday life, this is still an interesting story and we could use the way these superforecasters think as a model to..." Read more

106 customers mention "Value for money"106 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be worth the money, describing it as wonderful, useful, and satisfying to read, with one customer noting its practical approach.

"...Easy reading? Not really. However, worth the effort." Read more

"With Superforecasting, Philip Tetlock has made yet another valuable contribution to the small shelf of good books on forecasting...." Read more

"...Overall, "Superforecasting" is worth a read if you're deeply interested in the topic of prediction and decision-making...." Read more

"...information will be old to you, but as a first introduction this book does its job well...." Read more

86 customers mention "Readability"62 positive24 negative

Customers find the book very readable and well written, with one customer noting it needs to be read twice to fully appreciate it.

"...Easy reading? Not really. However, worth the effort." Read more

"...It's a harrowing underdog story. The author does a good job on showing how to predict the future when it comes to financial and socio-..." Read more

"...The writing style is accessible, which is a plus, but I sometimes felt like the authors were stretching their material to fill pages...." Read more

"...The dialogue gets cumbersome at some points for my taste. Still, read this book if you're interested in the subject...." Read more

20 customers mention "Content quality"17 positive3 negative

Customers appreciate the content of the book, finding it well-explained and detailed, with one customer noting it provides excellent guidance on approaching questions and another highlighting its thorough breakdown of arguments.

"...The book does a good job of explaining how some people are consistently better at making predictions than others, and it offers insights into their..." Read more

"...The book gives you an excellent discussion of Daniel Kahneman’s systems 1 and 2...." Read more

"...Ideas like: practicing asking precision questions, recognizing uncertainty, and seeing through the "baffle gab" that pseudo forecasters..." Read more

"The book offers a rigorous account and compelling argument for what almost anyone can do to be a better forecaster and to recognize the challenges..." Read more

37 customers mention "Forecasting accuracy"25 positive12 negative

Customers have mixed views on the forecasting accuracy of the book, with some praising its great handling of uncertainty and concise information, while others note that it contains very little actual forecasting content.

"...qualities to strive for as a forecaster: cautious, humble, nondeterministic, actively open-minded, reflective, numerate, pragmatic, analytical,..." Read more

"...12. What’s Next? All-in-all, an enlightening and informative explanation...." Read more

"...The problem is that hedgehogs make terrible forecasters. I've noticed this myself...." Read more

"...Although the information provided might be very useful, and I do not regret the read - I think the text is far too verbose and much of the content..." Read more

An interesting read on forecasting and how predictions are made
3 out of 5 stars
An interesting read on forecasting and how predictions are made
This is an interesting read on forecasting and how predictions are made. It examines a number of real world examples, outlining what went right, what went wrong, and how the process can be improved. There are a number of ways that one can improve the quality of their forecasts, ranging from knowing which questions to avoid, which data to try and focus on, and how to go back and re-evaluate your predictions. This book falls right in line with "Thinking, Fast and Slow" by Daniel Kahneman, so fans of that book would find this one interesting as well. As least that's what I predict!
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2018
    I really enjoyed this book a few years ago, and I have come back to offer a review based on my notes at the time and how the insights have settled for me over time. I took away many key concepts for successfully forecasting uncertain events and also some areas I noted for further exploration. Many of the following notes are structured from the authors' insight into the demonstrated practices of repeatedly successful forecasters.
    The book mentions repeatedly the importance of measurement for assessment and revising forecasts and programs. Many people simply don't create any metrics of anything when they make unverifiable and chronologically ambiguous declarations.
    The book emphasizes the importance of receiving this feedback on predictions that measurement allows, as there is a studied gap between confidence and skill in judgment. We have a tendency to be uninterested in accumulating counterfactuals, but we must know when we fail to learn from it. If forecasts are either not made or not quantified and ambiguous, we can't receive clear feedback, so the thought process that led to the forecasts can't be improved upon. Feedback, however, allows for the psychological trap of hindsight bias. This is that when we know the outcome, that knowledge of the outcome skews our perception of what we thought at the time of the prediction and before we knew the outcome.
    The main qualities for successful forecasting are being open-minded, careful, and undertaking self-critical thinking with focus, which is not effortless. Commitment to self-improvement is the strongest predictor of long-term performance in measured forecasting. This can basically be considered as equivalent to the popular concept of grit. Studies show that individuals with fixed mindsets do not pay attention to new information that could improve their future predictions. Similarly, forecasts tend to improve when more probabilistic thinking is embraced rather than fatalistic thinking in regards to the perspective that certain events are inevitable.
    A few interesting findings that the authors expand upon in more detail in the book: experience is important to have the tacit knowledge essential to the practice of forecasting, and that grit, or perseverance, towards making great forecasts is three times as important as intelligence.
    Practices to undertake when forecasting are to create a breakdown of components to the question that you can distinguish and scrutinize your assumptions; develop backwards thinking as answering the questions of what you would need to know to answer the question, and then making appropriate numerical estimations for those questions; practice developing an outside view, which is starting with an anchored view from past experience of others, at first downplaying the problem's uniqueness; explore other potential views regarding the question; and express all aspects and perspectives into a single number that can be manipulated and updated.
    Psychological traps to be aware of discussed in the book include confirmation bias, which is a willingness to seek out information that confirms your hypothesis and not seek out information that may contradict it, which is the opposite of discovering counterfactuals; belief perseverance, also known as cognitive dissonance, in which individuals can be incapable of updating their belief in the face of new evidence by rationalization in order to not have their belief upset; scope insensitivity, which is not properly factoring in an important aspect of applicability of scope, such as timeframe, properly into the forecast; and thought type replacement, which is replacing a hard question in analysis with a similar question that's not equivalent but which is much easier to answer.
    Researched qualities to strive for as a forecaster: cautious, humble, nondeterministic, actively open-minded, reflective, numerate, pragmatic, analytical, probabilistic, belief updaters, intuitive psychologists, growth mindset.
    The authors then delve into a bit of another practical perspective on forecasting, which involves teams. Psychological traps for teams include the known phenomenon known as groupthink, which is that small cohesive groups tend to unconsciously develop shared illusions and norms that are often biased in favor of the group, which interfere with critical thinking regarding objective reality. There is also a tendency for members of the group to leave the hard work of critical thinking to others on the team instead of sharing this work optimally, which when combined with groupthink, leads the group towards tending to feel a sense of completion upon reaching a level of agreement. One idea to keep in mind for management of a group is that the group's collective thinking can be described as a product of the communication of the group itself and not the sum of the thinking of the individual members of a group.
    There are some common perceived problems with forecasting, which receive attention in the book: the wrong side of maybe fallacy, which is the thinking that a forecast was bad because the forecast was greater than 50% but the event didn't occur, which can lead to forecasters not willing to be vulnerable with their forecasts; publishing forecasts for all to see, where research shows that public posting of forecasts, with one's name associated with the forecast, creates more open-mindedness and increased performance; and the fallacy that because many factors are unquantifiable due their real complexity, the use of numbers in forecasting is therefore not useful.

    Some concepts that I took note of for further research from the book were: Bayesian-based application for belief updating, which is basically a mathematical way of comparing how powerful your past belief was relative to some specific new information, chaos theory, game theory, Monte Carlo methods, and systematic intake of news media. These are concepts that I was particularly interested in from the book based on my own interests and that I have continued to explore. This book was very valuable for cohesively bringing together the above concepts in the context of a compelling story, based on the DARPA research project which was compellingly won by the author's team as a product of the research that led to this groundbreaking book.
    84 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2015
    I have been, and continue to be, a pundit. Upon reading this book I discovered that one of the reasons I'm somewhat good at punditry is because I am what Tetlock calls a "hedgehog."

    Hedgehogs tell tight, simple, clear stories that grab and hold audiences.

    Hedgehogs are confident. We organise our thoughts around "Big Ideas" and then we squeeze complex problems into our preferred cause-effect templates. Let's face it--hedgehogs make good pundits. The problem is that hedgehogs make terrible forecasters.

    I've noticed this myself. When predicting how the Supreme Court will decide a case, what a jury will decide, or how the public may respond to something, my forecasts are notoriously inaccurate.

    Reading Forecasting may not change my tactics in giving interviews (why mess with success) but I think it will affect how I write in the future.

    Concepts like Fermi estimates, outside vs. inside views, confirmation biases, and questioning basic, emotionally charged beliefs are not in my toolbox, but they will be now. If I am going to offer predictions I owe it to my readers to sharpen these skills.

    Easy reading? Not really. However, worth the effort.
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2024
    TOGETHER We have learned a lot about superforecasters, from their lives to their test scores to their work habits. Taking stock, we can now sketch a rough composite portrait of the modal superforecaster. In philosophic outlook, they tend to be:

    CAUTIOUS: Nothing is certain

    HUMBLE: Reality is infinitely complex

    NONDETERMINISTIC: What happens is not meant to be and does not have to happen In their abilities and thinking styles, they tend to be:

    ACTIVELY OPEN-MINDED: Beliefs are hypotheses to be tested, not treasures to be protected

    INTELLIGENT AND KNOWLEDGEABLE, WITH A “NEED FOR COGNITION”: Intellectually curious, enjoy puzzles and mental challenges

    REFLECTIVE: Introspective and self-critical

    NUMERATE: Comfortable with numbers

    In their methods of forecasting they tend to be:

    PRAGMATIC: Not wedded to any idea or agenda

    ANALYTICAL: Capable of stepping back from the tip-of-your-nose perspective and considering other views

    DRAGONFLY-EYED: Value diverse views and synthesize them into their own

    PROBABILISTIC: Judge using many grades of maybe

    THOUGHTFUL UPDATERS: When facts change, they change their minds

    GOOD INTUITIVE PSYCHOLOGISTS: Aware of the value of checking thinking for cognitive and emotional biases In their work ethic, they tend to have:

    A GROWTH MINDSET: Believe it’s possible to get better

    GRIT: Determined to keep at it however long it takes

    What more to say?

    “But ultimately, as with intelligence, this has less to do with traits someone possesses and more to do with behavior. A brilliant puzzle solver may have the raw material for forecasting, but if he doesn’t also have an appetite for questioning basic, emotionally charged beliefs he will often be at a disadvantage relative to a less intelligent person who has a greater capacity for self-critical thinking. It’s not the raw crunching power you have that matters most. It’s what you do with it.’’

    ‘Questioning emotional beliefs’! Who does that! These ‘super-forecasters’.

    What else ?

    “Yet these are ordinary people. Forecasting is their hobby. Their only reward is a gift certificate and bragging rights on Facebook. Why do they put so much into it? One answer is it’s fun. “Need for cognition” is the psychological term for the tendency to engage in and enjoy hard mental slogs. People high in need for cognition are the sort who like crosswords and Sudoku puzzles, the harder, the better—and superforecasters score high in need-for-cognition tests.’’

    ‘Need for cognition’. I didn’t know there was a term for this problem. I’ve worked out that’s my situation. Interesting.

    Another gem . . .

    “That was deeply perceptive. People often assume that when a decision is followed by a good outcome, the decision was good, which isn’t always true, and can be dangerous if it blinds us to the flaws in our thinking.’’

    Great!

    CONTENTS
    1. An Optimistic Skeptic
    2. Illusions of Knowledge
    3. Keeping Score
    4. Superforecasters
    5. Supersmart? 6.
    Superquants?
    7. Supernewsjunkies?
    8. Perpetual Beta
    9. Superteams
    10. The Leader’s Dilemma
    11. Are They Really So Super?
    12. What’s Next?

    All-in-all, an enlightening and informative explanation.

    One key theme, intelligence not controlled and harnessed to training is just . . . wasted.

    Recommended.

    Dozens and dozens of notes (some linked)

    No index

    No photographs
    4 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Raghu
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
    Reviewed in the Netherlands on March 23, 2018
    This is an amazing book. I had read Thinking Fast and Slow before this. I thought these books pose juxtaposing ideas. Great insights into how human beings make decisions and how to consciously employ system 2.
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  • Francisco Inacio Bastos
    5.0 out of 5 stars Uma obra simples, mas inspiradora
    Reviewed in Brazil on March 4, 2025
    O livro de Tetlock foi escrito em parceria com um jornalista (Gardner), que, nas palavras de Tetlock, tornou a escrita fluida e a exposição de conceitos complexos, didática e objetiva.

    O livro percorre várias correntes do pensamento contemporâneo, como a análise de diversas heurísticas, segundo a concepção de Amos Tversky e Daniel Kahneman (tendo o Autor dialogado ao longo da elaboração do livro com este último, em interação definidas como "socráticas", em suas própria palavras).

    Para não tornar esta resenha maçante, vou me deter em outros dois aspectos apenas.

    O primeiro é a ideia, inicialmente formulada por Fermi, de decompor problemas complexos em elementos mais simples, permitindo, com isso, estimar fenômenos com grande precisão. Uma versão mais moderna do mesmo método é detalhada por Lawrence Weinstein (em seus artigos e nos livros Guesstimation e Guesstimation 2.0), que não são citados, por razões que desconheço.

    O segundo é o debate com Nassim Taleb, com quem o Autor inclusive escreveu um artigo em colaboração. Longe da retórica inflamada de Taleb, ele reconhece que fenômenos de previsibilidade nula e a ocorrência de fatos inteiramente inesperados, são parte da vida e do mundo, e têm consequências matemáticas e estatísticas corretamente definidas por Taleb (distribuições com caudas sobremaneira longas ou pesadas), mas que isso não invalida a capacidade de previsão em um mundo onde tais fenômenos, de fato, podem ocorrer (os famosos "cisnes negros"), mas não constituem uma ameaça a qualquer previsibilidade, como argumentado por Taleb. Os conceitos extremos de Taleb tornariam o mundo, de tal modo, inapreensível, a ponto de flutuarmos na pura estocasticidade.

    Tendo a me alinhar com Tetlock, pois, a despeito da validade das críticas de Taleb, meu próprio trabalho cotidiano é identificar padrões e analisá-los. Obviamente, em um mundo carente de qualquer padrão discernível, tal exercício é inteiramente inútil.
  • Liam Kelleher
    5.0 out of 5 stars The art of writing a Pop-Science book
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 20, 2016
    One simply cant put this book down. Phillips Tettlock and Alan Gardner have clearly taken a leaf out of Gladwellian type books in terms of entertaining content as opposed a more Kahneman type approach which bombards one with details. The book is not of course a detailed methodology of how to forecast but simply looks at a simple question. What makes a good forecaster? We are led through the authors thoughts' on this matter throughout the book by means of some high end anecdotes (Obama, General Petraeus etc) and some more simple retired fold who happen to be good at forecasting. We know that they are good at forecasting through the online forecasting tool developed by Tetlock and others which invited participants to simply make forecasts on a number of events. All for the grand allure of an amazon gift voucher! (Well more books eh?). Once the cream rises to the top of this forecasting competition, the book then delves into what makes a good forecaster, which are summarised in temp key points at the end of the book. Its all bout being logical, taking baby steps (joining the dots), keeping up to date with the latest events, making small incremental changes in your forecast and of course remember that are human and prone to errors and bias.

    Although the book was more an entertaining summary of the study and why old retirees were getting Brier scores better than high paid statisticians, I was perhaps expecting a bit more science in this pop-science book. However full marks for this book. I understand if I want the science I am sure I can find some papers by him online.
  • AleBs
    5.0 out of 5 stars A must read
    Reviewed in Italy on February 8, 2024
    If You are wondering how often the pundits are right, you will discover almost never… Your feeling is right! It s science based
  • 並木俊守命
    5.0 out of 5 stars 予想の精度を上げるお手本
    Reviewed in Japan on June 10, 2018
     本書は、英Economistが2015年の年末特集号の「今年の本」として登場していましたので、投資の助けになるかと思い買いました。
     感想ですが、これはアタリです。内容は他のレビュワー様が書かれているとおりですが、自分が本気で予想の精度を上げようとするのであれば、どう取り組むべきなのか、お手本を示してくれています。将来予想のような雲をつかむ作業にも、ある程度の知性と分析能力が必要なようですが、あとは「汗」だというのが本書で分かります。しかも一人の将来予想屋の話ではなく、予想の精度が高い何人にも共通している手法を示していますので、この方法は「本物」だと自信をもって自分の時間と労力をかける覚悟がつきます。
     なお、将来予想が100%当たるための書籍ではなく、あくまで「精度を上げる」ためのものですのでご注意を。