Reviews

The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives by Leonard Mlodinow

redowns1022's review against another edition

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3.0

Read on a recommendation. As I will have to be taking statistics in graduate school, this was a fun intro to the subject. I like his choice of stories to illustrate mathematical points (perhaps a little more than the points themselves). Overall, good read (though it does take a little bit of time to read for us non-mathematical types).

jsilverman84's review against another edition

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4.0

This book covered many interesting themes in decision-making theory, probability and statistics. Although the theoretical treatment of these subjects was not particularly thorough, the author wove them together by telling the stories of the lives of the theorists.

I was repeatedly amazed by how certain ways of thinking that seem "obvious" today (eg. averaging result of multiple samples) were so unintuitive when they were first presented to the world. It was fascinating to learn about the circumstances under which these breakthroughs occurred. If you're interested in revisiting the themes of Thinking Fast Slow and other works on the limits of human reasoning through a historical lens, I would recommend this book.

bbirchett's review against another edition

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funny informative medium-paced

3.5

carlos_p14's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced

4.0

Interesting book for those who like statistics. Pretty easy to understand with cool curiosities of how numbers have influence on our lives 

amarettto's review against another edition

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4.0

This was a pretty good book in the sense that it touched on all the topics I expected a book on randomness and chance events to touch on. While it presents statistical analysis and examples of perceptions of chance in day-to-day life in an easily consumable fashion, I still won’t really say it’s a finish-in-one-sitting kind of book. I did need to mull over a few things it went over.
I particularly liked that it drove home the point that even random is actually ‘normal’. Outliers are part of what makes the entire distribution a normal one, which makes them not out of the ordinary either. Just less likely. This actually helped me apply these thoughts to my actual life and how I perceive negative and positive events (like one of the last few chapters goes into) and that in the grand scheme of things, a lot of your experiences are shaped out of luck. I tend to struggle with the notion of whether or not someone is completely in control of their destiny and understanding that they are only in control FOR THE MOST PART is humbling and oddly comforting because it feels like you have a partner, even though they may be a silent wildcard.

anniegfromnc's review against another edition

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challenging funny informative medium-paced

4.5

jennifermilanovic's review

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funny informative inspiring medium-paced

5.0

tashery's review against another edition

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2.0

More like 2.5 stars. I give 3 stars to good books. 4 stars to excellent books. 5 stars to unputdownable books. This wasn't a bad book. Informative and factual. What it lacked was the entertainment... It took me almost two years to read this book as I kept reading a few pages, leaving for it for a while and picking it up again. As someone who is fascinated by numbers, psychology and all things in between, I didn't find this book very engaging or easy to read. Not the worst book of its genre but by far not the best... even though it was supposedly a best-seller.

fbroom's review

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3.0

This was my fourth attempt (1 course in high school and 2 courses in college) to understand probability and statistics.

It is a journey into the world of randomness, probability and statistics.

Concepts, examples from real life and a historical tour that explores the lives of the people who influenced the field: Cardano, Pascal, Jakob Bernoulli, Leibniz, Bayes, Quetelet, Galton, Einstein and so many other famous mathematicians (I liked this part).

The concepts are difficult to grasp (at least to me) but the author tried so hard to simplify them by applying those concepts to real life examples and by explaining how those scientists actually came up with those concepts.

Maybe randomness as a concept is difficult. The author’s point is that we are so used to look for patterns all the time while many of the things that actually happened, happened randomly.

bereza's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.5