Reviews / Press
“The Science of Fear elegantly weaves academic research and everyday experience, exposing the secrets of emotion and reason, and the essential roles they play on our lives. An excellent book.” — Dan Ariely, Author of New York Times bestseller Predictably Irrational
“Those of us who spend our careers in research hope that someone like Daniel Gardner will come along and bring our findings to the world in an engaging and scientifically accurate way. Thank you, Dan! Some books can change the world. This one might.” — Paul Slovic, Professor of Psychology, University of Oregon, past President of The Society for Risk Analysis
“Fear needs a science and Daniel Gardner offers a fast-paced tour of what the most interesting researchers have revealed. The number of things that you don't need to be afraid of is encouraging, but finding out why we still do fear them anyway is fascinating. Essential reading for anyone interested in the social mistakes we make everyday--and how to fix them.” — Tyler Cowen, Author of Discover Your Inner Economist
“Gardner’s vivid, direct style, backed up by clear examples and solid data from science and psychology, brings a breath of fresh air and common sense to an emotional topic.” — Publisher's Weekly
“Compelling.... By showing how to read statistics properly and engage the head over gut instinct, Gardner aims to get us thinking more carefully about how we run ourlives - and make it harder for politicians, the media and advertisers to lead us astray.” — The New Scientist (Read the full review)
“Terrific.... As a writer, he's exceptionally good - he has the clarity of Malcolm Gladwell.... He takes you through a maze of difficult academic work, and makes it seem simple.” — The Evening Standard (London)(Read the full review)
“Risk gives a fascinating insight into the peculiar and devastating nature of human fear, while training the reader to be ever wary of misleading media announcements.” — The Daily Telegraph (Read the full review)
“Risk elegantly summarises the results of psychological research.... Gardner is forensic in his dissection of bogus claims in advertising and politics, just as he is lucid about the science explaining why they work. His chapters on the risk of being a victim of crime or terrorism provoke a peculiar mix of comfort and despair. It is heartening that the danger is slight; it's unsettling how skewed our political system and consumer culture are towards convincing us of the opposite.” — The Observer (Read the full review)
“An excellent work.... Mr Gardner never falls into the trap of becoming frustrated and embittered by the waste and needless worry that he is documenting. A personal anecdote about an unwise foray into a Nigerian slum in search of a stolen wallet disposes of the idea that the author is immune to the foibles he describes. What could easily have been a catalogue of misgovernance and stupidity instead becomes a cheery corrective to modern paranoia.” — The Economist (Read the full review)
“Where writers such as Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and Francis Wheen have been content largely to enumerate the errors of less rational men and women, Dan Gardner has collated part of what we need to diagnose the problem. If sceptics spent less time moaning about the propensity of their fellows to believe what they want to believe and more time asking why they do so, there might not be such a crisis of reason in the West today.” — The Independent (Read the full review)
“Advocates of philosophy and critical thinking as panaceas for widespread irrationality have only got it half right. Unless we understand the psychological forces that shape our thinking, being equipped with logic is as likely to give us the tools to rationalise our prejudices as it is to empower us to challenge them. Gardner's book is thus an invaluable resource for anyone who aspires to think clearly.” — The Guardian (Read the full review)
“There has been a rash of books and films recently on the politics and culture of fear, but unlike most of them, Dan is not content to blame the media, or blame corporations. He leads us through the evolutionary biology that underlies our sense of risk and the innumeracy that confounds our attempts at managing it, and only then does he turn to the way these cognitive dispositions allow for political manipulation. In short, this is the best book out there on one of the most important subjects of our time.” — Andrew Potter, Columnist, Maclean's magazine, and Author of Rebel Sell
“Gardner achieves some very clearheaded calm-mongering. By showing us how we misunderstand and miscalculate risks, he gives us the tools to rethink them.” — Discover magazine
“...an entertaining, often jolting account of why trivial risks terrify us, even as we engage in wildly dangerous activities with hardly a qualm.” — Kirkus (starred review)
“Eminently readable...compelling evidence that unfounded fears pose real dangers.” — Wilson Quarterly
“Risk is a timely book that is packed with absorbing details.” — Glasgow Sunday Herald















comments
http://www.ci.st-helens.or.us/blog/water-filtration-facility/2011/Feb/25/parts-water-quality-reports/
Some context may be provided by the safe level of inorganic mercury, per EPA, in drinking water, which is 2ppb.
Big numbers are just hard, I guess...
Thanks
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