Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong about the World--And Why Things Are Better Than You Think

Ten Reasons We're Wrong about the World--And Why Things Are Better Than You Think

paperback

English language

Published Oct. 19, 2019 by Flatiron Books.

ISBN:
978-1-250-23198-7
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

View on Inventaire

3 stars (1 review)

Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World – and Why Things Are Better Than You Think is a 2018 book by Swedish statistician Hans Rosling with his son Ola Rosling and daughter-in-law Anna Rosling Rönnlund. The book was published posthumously a year after Hans Rosling died from pancreatic cancer. In the book, Rosling suggests that the vast majority of people are wrong about the state of the world. He demonstrates that his test subjects believe the world is poorer, less healthy, and more dangerous than it actually is, attributing this not to random chance but to misinformation.Rosling recommends thinking about the world as divided into four levels based on income brackets (rather than the prototypical developed/developing framework) and suggests ten instincts that prevent us from seeing real progress in the world.Bill Gates highlighted the book as one of his suggested five books worth reading for summer 2018, offering to …

6 editions

reviewed Factfulness by Hans Rosling

Freakonomics for Humanitarians

3 stars

We need a more fact-based world view. You can probably find the 10 instincts and their respective solutions out there on the web and that greatly summarizes the good parts of the book. In a sense, this is the extrapolation of Thinking Fast and Slow applied to humanitarian progress. The bonus of reading the book instead of just looking up the list is getting showered with positive statistics about our progress in all kinds of important metrics regarding poverty, health, education and equality around the world. That was a healthy outcome and I appreciate the effects it had on me.

Still, for a book about resisting cognitive baits, every chapter will include a dozen. The author poses ill defined questions like "how many people have some access to electricity?", and of course the provided answers are set up in a way that you're blown away by the biggest number being …