Search This Blog
Showing posts with label predictions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label predictions. Show all posts
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Matthew Yglesias » The Trouble With Prescience
Matthew Yglesias » The Trouble With Prescience: "And in the reputational economy of analysts the consequences are even worse. If you go along with the herd and then predict a problem a month before it arises, then you strike everyone as prescient. But if you start warning about something and then it doesn’t happen, and then you keep nagging people, and then you keep complaining about how nobody’s listening to you, you start getting dismissed as a crank. And when you’re proven right, you’re still that crank nobody wants to listen to. You don’t get hailed as a hero. But Ben Bernanke who made very mainstream mistakes and then pivoted adroitly once the bill came due does."
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Science: Prediction or Explanation?
Economist's View: "There has been no shortage of effort devoted to predicting earthquakes, yet we still can't see them coming far enough in advance to move people to safety. When a big earthquake hits, it is a surprise. We may be able to look at the data after the fact and see that certain stresses were building, so it looks like we should have known an earthquake was going to occur at any moment, but these sorts of retrospective analyses have not allowed us to predict the next one. The exact timing and location is always a surprise."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)