Counting, Deborah Stone
Counting, Deborah Stone
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Counting
How We Use Numbers to Decide What Matters

Author: Deborah Stone

Narrator: Donna Postel

Unabridged: 7 hr 27 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Kalorama

Published: 11/10/2020

Categories: Nonfiction, Mathematics


Synopsis

What do people do when they count? What do numbers really mean? We all know that people can lie with statistics, but in this groundbreaking work, eminent political scientist Deborah Stone uncovers a much deeper problem. With help from Dr. Seuss and Cookie Monster, she explains why numbers can't be objective: in order to count, one must first decide what counts. Every number is the ending to a story built on cultural assumptions, social conventions, and personal judgments.

And yet, in this age of big data and metric mania, numbers shape almost every facet of our lives: whether we get hired, fired, or promoted; whether we get into college or out of prison; how our opinions are gathered and portrayed to politicians; or how government designs health and safety regulations. In warm and playful prose, Counting explores what happens when we measure nebulous notions like merit, race, poverty, pain, or productivity.

Suffused with moral reflection and ending with a powerful epilogue on COVID-19's dizzying statistics, Counting will forever change our relationship with numbers.

About Deborah Stone

Deborah Stone is an acclaimed scholar who has taught at Brandeis, MIT, and universities around the world. Her award-winning book Policy Paradox has captivated readers through three decades, four editions, and six translations-but who's counting? She lives in Brookline, Massachusetts.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Shane

If you've read Stone's earlier book, the Policy Paradox, this book will feel familiar. It's an updated version of her numbers chapters with more examples and nuance. Stone is excellent at drawing our eyes to the things we take for granted in society and policy. The book is full of examples from mult......more

Goodreads review by Heather

The book simply expounds on the author’s thesis that numbers, or statistics, are subjective. They are based on the definition you give to categorizing whatever it is you are counting. I did not finish this book because I didn’t find it interesting enough. Big thanks to Netgalley and the publisher fo......more

Goodreads review by Holly

An interesting discussion exploring the conundrums of using numbers to decide and inform. From our youth we are taught numbers are absolute and there’s only one answer, yet the prolific application of numbers in real life is much more complicated and biased......more