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The Sum of Our Discontent

The Sum of Our Discontent

Why Numbers Make Us Irrational

by David Boyle
Publication Date: 17/06/2001

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"The counters are taking over our lives. For centuries, the humankind has attempted to divine meaning from life through numbers. The more materialistic we become, the more we need to quantify everything. Jeremy Bentham once defined the aim of politics as "the greatest happiness of the greatest number." Over the last two hundred years our means of quantification have become increasingly disturbing. Happiness has become quantifiable; surveys that "measure" emotional intelligence find that Mexicans are the happiest people on earth and the Japanese are the most miserable, love is measured by the number or orgasms, crime rates can be made to correspond to random speeches or sun spots, and a city's success is judged according to the number of vegetarian restaurants versus the number of McDonald's." "In our scientific and technological numbers-obsessed age, are we losing touch with our instincts? To what extent can statistics easily translate into happiness? This interdisciplinary book spans the impact of numbers on the very tenets of civilization: philosophy, science, art, and business."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved
ISBN:
9781587990601
9781587990601
Category:
Teacher training
Publication Date:
17-06-2001
Publisher:
Cengage South-Western
Country of origin:
United States
Dimensions (mm):
228.6x152.4mm
Weight:
0.45kg
David Boyle

David Boyle is the author of several books about history, the history of ideas and the future. His Authenticity: Brands, Fakes, Spin and the Lust for Real Life helped put the search for authenticity on the agenda as a social phenomenon, while Funny Money: In Search of Alternative Cash launched the 'time banks movement' in the UK.

His work on the history and future of money has also been published in many books and pamphlets. He has stood for Parliament and undertaken an independent review for the UK Treasury and Cabinet Office.

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