"Not so different in spirit from the way public intellectuals like John Kenneth Galbraith once shaped discussions of economic policy and public figures like Walter Cronkite helped sway opinion on the Vietnam War . . . could turn out to be
one of the more momentous books of the decade."
--New York Times Book Review "Mr. Silver, just 34, is an expert at finding signal in noise . . . Lively prose--from energetic to outraged . . . illustrates his dos and don'ts through a series of interesting essays that examine how predictions are made in fields including chess, baseball, weather forecasting, earthquake analysis and politics... [the] chapter on global warming is one of the most objective and honest analyses I've seen . . . even the noise makes for a good read."
--New York Times "A serious treatise about the craft of prediction--without academic mathematics--cheerily aimed at lay readers. Silver's coverage is polymathic, ranging from poker and earthquakes to climate change and terrorism."
--New York Review of Books "Mr. Silver's breezy style makes even the most difficult statistical material accessible. What is more, his arguments and examples are painstakingly researched . . ."
--Wall Street Journal "Nate Silver is the Kurt Cobain of statistics . . . His ambitious new book,
The Signal and the Noise, is a practical handbook and a philosophical manifesto in one, following the theme of prediction through a series of case studies ranging from hurricane tracking to professional poker to counterterrorism. It will be a supremely valuable resource for anyone who wants to make good guesses about the future, or who wants to assess the guesses made by others. In other words, everyone."
--The Boston Globe "Silver delivers an improbably breezy read on what is essentially a primer on making predictions."
--Washington Post "
The Signal and the Noise is many things--an introduction to the Bayesian theory of probability, a meditation on luck and character, a commentary on poker's insights into life--but it's most important function is its most basic and absolutely necessary one right now: a guide to detecting and avoiding bullshit dressed up as data . . . What is most refreshing . . . is its
humility. Sometimes we have to deal with not knowing, and we need somebody to tell us that."
--Esquire "[An] entertaining popularization of a subject that scares many people off . . .Silver's journey from consulting to baseball analytics to professional poker to political prognosticating is very much that of a restless and curious mind. And this, more than number-crunching, is where real forecasting prowess comes from."
--Slate "Nate Silver serves as a sort of Zen master to American election-watchers . . . In the spirit of Nassim Nicholas Taleb's widely read
The Black Swan, Mr. Silver asserts that humans are overconfident in their predictive abilities, that they struggle to think in probabilistic terms and build models that do not allow for uncertainty."
--The Economist "Silver explores our attempts at forecasting stocks, storms, sports, and anything else not set in stone."
--Wired "The Signal and the Noise is essential reading in the era of Big Data that touches every business, every sports event, and every policymaker."
--Forbes.com "Laser sharp. Surprisingly, statistics in Silver's hands is not without some fun."
--Smithsonian Magazine
"A substantial, wide-ranging, and potentially important gauntlet of probabilistic thinking based on actual data thrown at the feet of a culture determined to sweep away silly liberal notions like 'facts.'"
--The Village Voice "Silver shines a light on 600 years of human intelligence-gathering--from the advent of the printing press all the way through the Industrial Revolution and up to the current day--and he finds that it's been an inspiring climb. We've learned so much, and we still have so much left to learn."
--MLB.com "Nate Silver's
The Signal and the Noise is The Soul of a New Machine for the 21st century (a century we thought we'd be a lot better at predicting than we actually are). Our political discourse is already better informed and more data-driven because of Nate's influence. But here he shows us what he has always been able to see in the numbers--the heart and the ethical imperative of getting the quantitative questions right. A wonderful read--totally engrossing."
--Rachel Maddow, author of Drift "Yogi Berra was right: 'forecasting is hard, especially about the future.' In this important book, Nate Silver explains why the performance of experts varies from prescient to useless and why we must plan for the unexpected. Must reading for anyone who cares about what might happen next."
--Richard Thaler, co-author of Nudge