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Head in the Cloud: Why Knowing Things Still Matters When Facts Are So Easy to Look Up
Head in the Cloud: Why Knowing Things Still Matters When Facts Are So Easy to Look Up
Head in the Cloud: Why Knowing Things Still Matters When Facts Are So Easy to Look Up
Audiobook8 hours

Head in the Cloud: Why Knowing Things Still Matters When Facts Are So Easy to Look Up

Written by William Poundstone

Narrated by Chris Sorensen

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this audiobook

The real-world value of knowledge in the mobile-device age. More people know who Khloe Kardashian is than who Rene Descartes was. Most can't find Delaware on a map, correctly spell the word occurrence, or name the largest ocean on the planet. But how important is it to fill our heads with facts? A few keystrokes can summon almost any information in seconds. Why should we bother learning facts at all? Bestselling author William Poundstone confronts that timely question in HEAD IN THE CLOUD. He shows that many areas of knowledge correlate with the quality of our lives-wealth, health, and happiness-and even with politics and behavior. Combining Big Data survey techniques with eye-opening anecdotes, Poundstone examines what Americans know (and don't know) on topics ranging from quantum physics to pop culture. HEAD IN THE CLOUD asks why we're okay with spelling errors on menus but not on resumes; why Fox News viewers don't know which party controls Congress; why people who know "trivia" make more money than those who don't; how individuals can navigate clickbait and media spin to stay informed about what really matters. Hilarious, humbling, and wildly entertaining, HEAD IN THE CLOUD is a must-read for anyone who doesn't know everything.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 19, 2016
ISBN9781501936104
Head in the Cloud: Why Knowing Things Still Matters When Facts Are So Easy to Look Up
Author

William Poundstone

William Poundstone is the bestselling author of more than a dozen nonfiction books, including Fortune's Formula, Gaming the Vote and Priceless. His books Labyrinths of Reason and The Recursive Universe were both nominated for the Pulitzer Prize.

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Reviews for Head in the Cloud

Rating: 3.525 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Why should I learn anything when I can just look it up on Google? That's the question this book attempts to answer.Many areas of knowledge correlate with the quality of our lives, including areas like health, wealth and happiness. The author is not suggesting that everyone should be smart enough to appear on a TV show like "Jeopardy." It's totally fine if a person's knowledge is "a mile wide and an inch deep." The author found strong correlations between income and scores on general knowledge quizzes (even if they are multiple choice). It's possible that learning improves cognitive abilities that are useful almost anywhere, including in a career.How bad is the ignorance of the average American? Less that 10 percent of Americans don't know what country New Mexico is in. About the same percentage of younger Americans can find Afghanistan on a map, according to a 2006 National Geographic poll. More than half could not find Delaware on a map.People who don't know which city has an airport called LaGuardia correlates with thinking that there are at least twice as many Asians in America than there actually are. Not knowing that the Sun is bigger than Earth correlates with supporting bakers who refuse to make wedding cakes for same-sex couples. Thinking that America has more people has more people than India correlates with refusing to eat genetically modified food. Not knowing how many US Senators there are, or thinking that early humans hunted dinosaurs, correlates with refusing to vaccinate children for measles, mumps and rubella.According to a 2015 report from the Educational Testing Service (the people behind the SAT's), more than half of Millennials don't know the poison that killed Socrates; they can't name the Virginia home of Thomas Jefferson; they don't know who recorded "All Shook Up" and "Heartbreak Hotel"; they don't know who (in popular myth) designed and sewed the first American flag; they can't name the secret project that built the first atomic bomb; they can't name the largest ocean on Earth, the longest river in South America or the city whose airport is Heathrow.Wow (and not in a good way). These people are going to be running America in the near future? This is a very disheartening book, and is extremely highly recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    William Poundstone argues that knowledge for its own sake is important, and because of the Dunning-Kruger effect - that annoying fact where when you don't know much about something, you think you know it all - the American public doesn't realize their own ignorance about a lot of things.At least, that's how the book starts out. And ends. And if the meat of the book had in fact been "why knowing things still matters when facts are so easy to look up," I probably would've been singing its praises instead of giving a lukewarm review. Because what the majority of the book is isn't explaining why you should know things, but a series of randomized surveys the author did showing how much the general public doesn't know about anything from politics to sports to science to religion, and everything in between. He does have one of the best general explanations of statistics used in such studies that I've ever read in a popular nonfiction book. But am I really going to equate knowing who your vice president is with being able to spell "accommodate" correctly on the first try? He doesn't try to make a distinction between the facts that one "should" know and the ones that are less important. I know a lot about literature, and I'm a decent speller and grammarian, and gosh dark I know shrimp isn't kosher... but there are a lot of facts he tests on that I'm not sure it's all that important that I do know.Beyond the broad range of facts with no attempt to argue their relative importance to each other, I was not convinced by the main statistically significant correlation he does draw on, that people who did better on the tests had higher household income. He did spend some time discussing the difference between correlation and causation, which was good, but I was left unconvinced that the higher household income really mattered much. Wouldn't it be a fairly convincing argument that those with higher income have more free time to pursue sports, the arts, and more and have the leisure time to learn all these trivia facts? The other piece of this is context matters. If I'm given a random multiple-choice quiz with imagery of "menu," "exit" and other visual signs, I'm probably going to get things wrong - yet still understand them when I see them in context, say, at the airport. I tried to follow along some of the quizzes and sometimes I was saying to myself, "I have no idea..." only to go "Oh yeah, that's right, I remember that now!" when given the answer.While the facts he presents are at times sobering, funny, and interesting - and that's why this has as high a rating as I'm giving it, because it was engaging - he hardly convinced me (a librarian, to boot) that accumulating random facts would really help me in my day-to-day life. He's not really analyzing "why knowing things still matter" but emphasizing once again that we don't know everything, something that's not all surprising given how our brains work and how much information is out there. The one thing I did take away from the final chapters was that I want to more systematically keep track of the news and current events.