dragansfanone
New Member
Has anyone read Freakonomics? Recommend?
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Miss Shelf said:come on, hasn't anyone read this?? I've been waiting to find out if it's worth reading!
Sanitha said:How good is this book? Is it worth reading even if you aren't completely fascinated by the world of numbers?
If you haven't already purchased it, try Zooba....9.95 U.S. dollars.Prairie_Girl said:I keep almost buying this, but I need to do it quick, while it's still a best seller. Right now it's 30% off at Chapters, plus I get another ten. I won't be able to buy it that cheap as a trade paper. I think I'll pick it up tomorrow.
Motokid said:There is a section in the book about fear. How to put a sleeping baby to bed. Face down or face up? Cars being safer than airplanes or not? Guns or swimming pools, which is safer?
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I read a lot of economics analysis, mostly on The Levy Institute website. I think all economics analysis is interesting and open to neverending debate.
A few of the issues I have with Freakonomics:
As Malcolm Gladwell has pointed out, if crime rates have gone down due to legalized abortion, why wasn't there a corresponding drop in crime when the Pill (the use of which is far more widespread) was legalized? Instead, in the generation following that legalization, crime dramatically increased.
Also, Freakonomics points only to crime rates in INNER CITIES. In the same period, suburban and rural crime rose substantially. I think there has been a displacement of the poor from inner cities to poorer suburbs, beginning in the late 80s.
The point is, economists can look at any phenomenon and find a few threads of influence feeding into it, and make a story about it. That's what they do. So much of it is thought-provoking.
I think the strength of that book is in the authors' knack for finding phenomena that the average person will sit up and pay attention to. I mean, how many people are interested in the rate of increase of personal debt in China, even though the implications for the world are far more serious?
novella said:If everyone flew a plane to work, I think airplanes would be more dangerous than cars.
If kids were told to go outside and play with the gun, guns would be more dangerous than swimming pools.
Right? I mean, it's obvious that these comparisons are apples and oranges. Why compare two entirely different things? A weapon and a hole in the ground full of water? An airplane that takes months, if not years, of training and currency and constant 'checking out' to fly (my hub's a private pilot, BTW), or a vehicle any 17 year old can hop into in the middle of the night?
Freakonomics said:The per-hour death rate of driving versus flying, however, is about equal. The two contraptions are equally likely (or, in truth, unlikely) to lead to death.