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WRONG My latest book came out in June, 2010. It's called WRONG: Why experts* keep failing us--and how to know when not to trust them. It's about all the forces that push experts, be they top scientists, high-powered consultants, pop gurus, financial whizzes or journalistic pundits (like me), into misleading us with flawed advice, and discusses ways to tell good expert advice from the dubious stuff. It's published by Little, Brown. You can find it on Amazon here, and Barnes & Noble here. *Scientists, finance wizards, doctors, relationship gurus, celebrity CEOs, high-powered consultants, health officials, and more My new blog Making Sense of Medicine (the Wrong blog) is a spin-off effort from the book that takes a close, critical look at the latest medical findings being hyped by the media to help people put health news in perspective. International Praise for WRONG .Bravo!....Admirable and
disarming....What makes Wrong so right—it being as good
as any general account of the fragility of what we take as expert
knowledge—is that it raises the right questions....Invigorating.--The Wall Street Journal An exposé of the multiple ways that society’s so-called experts let us down, if not outright betray us. It’s a chunk of spicy populist outrage, and it can be a hoot....It’s news you can use. --The New York Times To read the factoids David Freedman rattles off in his book Wrong is terrifying....Why, then, do we blindly follow experts? Freedman has an idea....why we believe experts, how to find good advice and why we should trust him - even though he's kind of an expert. --TimeForcefully argued....Startling....Convincing....Makes a powerful case for the prevalence of scientific ineptitude. --The Washington Post Book World [Three stars.] Ours is unassailably the age of the expert....What, asks David Freedman in his combative new book, is the status of their collective wisdom?....A brisk interrogation of the extraordinary fallibility of even the most lauded and garlanded of our contemporary experts....[An] exposure of so many sources of contemporary scientific error.....Sober advice. --The British Medical Journal (BMJ) [A "Buzz Board" pick.] Rightly argues that the expertise epidemic isn’t just the fault of charlatans, but the population at large that demands the most dishonest shamans who come with an endless supply of simple, emotionally resonant elixirs. No audience is more gullible than the business community, which gleefully applies irrelevant “case studies” to their businesses and never wonders why their companies fail to become Apple or Google overnight. --The Daily Beast ....Really drives home the dubiousness of much--if not most--of what passes for expert wisdom....If Wrong is right, the magnitude of the problem is much greater than most people suspect....we’re awash in untrustworthy advice....so common are the serious errors catalogued in Wrong by even the most eminent researchers and institutions, though, and so influential are false claims in directing the flow of dollars and in propping up whole industries and reputations....On the surface, Wrong is about the untrustworthiness of expert advice, but it has much deeper implications. --Stanford University's David H. Voelker, in Skeptic Mind-bending....Crafts a compelling case....I have read many books on why well-intentioned (and sometimes ill-intentioned) purveyors of information make mistakes....Freedman's book [is now] my most-recommended text. --St. Louis Post-Dispatch Experts, Freedman argues quite convincingly, don't know what they're talking about most of the time....He offers an impressive array of reasons for the unreliability of experts....Freedman's frontal assault on practices in the hard sciences....shows that scientific studies are often inconclusive, misinterpreted, sweetened, or even outright fraudulent. --Chicago Reader An all-out assault on experts, and, perhaps more significantly, our mindsets....His two chapters on the trouble with scientists is likely required reading....The book is well written, and will shake you up...Follow some of his guidelines when the next expert promises to fix your organization. --The Globe & Mail If you have ever been exasperated by conflicting expert opinion on swine flu, the latest miracle drug or global warming (or is it "climate change"?), Wrong is the right book is for you....A useful and entertaining (when it is not disturbing) guide to the reasons experts are mostly wrong and how we can learn to recognize advice that is likely to be right....Disarming...enlightening....We need not be helpless before conflicting expertise. --The Winnipeg Free Press A merry chase down the road of skepticism....In accessible language, Freedman explains the flaws that all too easily worm their way into research....After pulling the rug from under the reader's feet on every imaginable topic....provides 11 “never-fail” rules for not being misled. --Publishers Weekly A revealing look at the fallibility of "experts," and tips on how to glean facts from the mass of published misinformation....Informative and engaging --Kirkus Reviews A guide to deciphering which expert advice is worth heeding.... advice worth taking By far one of the most interesting non-fiction books to have come out in recent times. --The Malay MailRead the Reviews of WRONG here WRONG In the News Discover Magazine: The Streetlight Effect The measurement problems that undermine many, if not most, scientific findings Newsweek: The Case Against Experts Time: Experts and Studies: Not Always Trustworthy The New York Post: Why Experts Are Usually Wrong Fast Company: The Gene Bubble Why genetic research isn't producing nearly the payoff that scientists told us to expect Babble.com: 6 Types of Parenting Advice You Shouldn’t Trust WRONG on Television & Radio Video Clips San Diego Live Rochester Denver Audio Clips New Hampshire Public Radio's "Word of Mouth" Paul Harris, KTRS St. Louis WNPR's Colin McEnroe Show Two Brief Excerpts from the Introduction I'm sitting in a coffee shop in a pediatric hospital in Boston, hard by a nine-foot-tall bronze teddy bear, with a man who is going to perform a surprising trick. I'm thinking of an article recently Wrong, Coverpublished in a prestigious medical journal, an article that reports the results of a research study, and he will tell me whether or not the study is likely to turn out to be right or wrong.. It's the sort of study that your doctor might read about, and that you might learn about from a newspaper, website or morning TV news shows. It may well be that the results of this study will change your life--they might convince you to start eating or avoiding certain foods to lower your risk of heart disease, or to take a certain drug to help you beat cancer, or to learn whether or not you are carrying a gene linked to vulnerability to a mental illness. But this man won't need to hear any of the particulars of the study to perform his feat. All he needs to know is that it was a study published in a top journal. His prediction: It's wrong. It's a prediction that strikes at the foundation of expertise, and our trust in it.... ....I'm not going to spend much time trying to convince you experts are often, and possibly usually, wrong. Instead, this book is about why expertise goes wrong, and how we may be able to do a better job of seeking out more trustworthy expert advice. To that end, we're going to look at how experts--including scientists, business gurus and our other highly trusted sources of wisdom--fall prey to a range of measurement errors, how they come to have deep biases that lead them into gamesmanship and even outright dishonesty, and how interactions among them tend to worsen rather than correct for these problems. We're also going to examine the ways in which the media sort through the flow of dubious expert pronouncements and further distort them, as well as how we ourselves are drawn to the worst of this shoddy output, and how we end up being even more misled on the Internet. Finally, we'll try to extract from everything we've discovered a set of rough guidelines that can help to separate the most suspect expert advice from the stuff that has a better chance of holding up. [Read the full introduction here, as reprinted in The New York Times] Some Factoids from WRONG
WRONG Table of Contents Introduction Some Expert Observations The Trouble with Scientists, Part 1 The Certainty Principle The Idiocy of Crowds The Trouble with Scientists, Part 2 Experts and Organizations Experts and the Media The Internet and the Technology of Expertise Eleven Simple Never-Fail Rules for Not Being Misled by Experts Appendix 1: A Tiny Sampling of Expert Wrongness, Conflict and Confusion Appendix 2: The Evolution of Expertise Appendix 3: A Brief Sampling of Contemporary, High-Powered, Apparent Scientific Fraud Appendix 4: Is This Book Wrong? Acknowledgments, Source Notes, Index --MORE COMING TO THIS PAGE VERY SOON!-- |